14 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, December 4, 1967 "I CAN'T BELIEVE IT" That's what Eileen Ireland, Kansas City, Mo.. junior (center), said when she was crowned Military Ball Queen Friday night. Junior crowned ROTC Ball queen An arch of sabers hailed Queen Eileen Ireland, Kansas City, Mo. junior, as she and her court were presented to a uniformed throng of ROTC cadets at the Military Ball Friday night. Dec Lee Davis, Shawnee Mission senior, representing Phi Beta Phi, and Dana Smith, Shawnee Mission sophomore, representing Gamma Phi Beta, as attendants. Art prints on display Original prints by modern and old master artists are on display today in the Museum of Art. About 500 original etchings, lithographs and woodcuts by such artists as Picasso, Chagall, Toulouse-Lautre, Renoir and Goya, plus manuscript pages from 13th to 15th century works, will be shown. Some modern prints are signed by the artist. A collection of the works of Kaethe Kollwitz (1867-1945), considered one of the best woman artists, also will be on view. All works shown are for sale. Prices range from $5 to $2,000, with most prints costing less than $1,000. Purchases may be charged or paid for over a three-month period. The exhibit and sale will be conducted by Roten Galleries, Baltimore, Md. received bouquets of roses. Vicechancellor George B. Smith presented a crown to Miss Ireland. An art education major, drill team commander of Angel Flight and Kansas candidate for Miss Drill Team USA, Miss Ireland represented Alpha Gamma Delta sorority in womens' living group competition. Other finalists were Connie Griffin, Denison Iowa junior, Alpha Chi Omega; Laura Sivright, Larned freshman, Miller Hall; and Lynne Scheufele, Prairie Village sophomore, Naismith Hall. Members of Scabbard and Blade, tri-service military honorary, made the selection preliminary to personal interviews with each finalist during the ball by Rev. Ronald Sundbye of First Methodist Church, Lawrence Mayor Richard Raney, and professor of sociology Lawrence Bee. Music by the 371st Army Band from Ft. Leavenworth harmonized with the red, white, and blue decor in the Kansas Union Ballroom which was transformed into a "Blue Grotto" for the formal event attended by about 50 personnel and dignitaries from KU military bases and ROTC detachments in Kansas. Prof speaks Wednesday Gen. John A. Seitz, retired commanding officer at Ft. Riley and a 1937 graduate of the Army ROTC program here, was honored with an engraved saber at intermission. A professor from the Case Institute of Technology in Kenya, Africa, will speak at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in 310 Summerfield as part of the computer science lecture series. The professor, William C. Lynch, will speak on "Generalized Language Design." Dossiers denied by deans- If The Shoe Fits REPAIR IT Continued from page 1 them and that the pictures were placed in the folders. Heller said an officer had taken photos without authorization from police superiors, but that they were not filed by KU officials. 8th ST. SHOE REPAIR 107 E. 8th 7:30 p.m.- 5:30 p.m. He said he believes the FBI clips articles about students "with enthusiasm." The University does not have a written policy on student information and how and to whom it is made available. Closed Sat. at Noon The first annual Jayhawk Basketball Camp, under the direction of KU head coach Ted Owens, will begin June 9 and continue through July 6. Cage camp set to open next June The primary purpose of the camp is to teach new skills in fundamentally sound basketball and to improve these young men's abilities in the finer points of the game, Owens said. Participants will range in age from 8-18 years. Under NCAA rules, high school graduates are ineligible. Owens will be aided by KU assistant coaches Sam Miranda and Gale Catlett. In addition, Jo Jo White will serve as a counselor and Rodger Bohnenstiehl will be an instructor. Salesmen: "There are a number of other camps in the country," Owens said. "There are a lot of boys interested in improving their basketball skills, and the best time for this is in the summer. "This is something I've wanted to do for a long time." IBM --risk of improper disclosure, academic and disciplinary records should be separate, and the conditions of access to each should be set forth in an explicit policy statement." HOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO DEAL WITH THE MANAGEMENT OF AMERICA'S TOP COMPANIES? That's what you would do as a sales representative for the Office Products Division of IBM. And that's significant. Because as an IBM representative you're more than just another "hardware salesman." You're helping management solve their "word processing" problems with some of the most advanced equipment ever manufactured—including the famous "Selectric" Typewriter, "Executary" dictation systems, and the new Magnetic Tape "Selectric" Typewriter, and Magnetic Composing Equipment. The Council on Student Affairs, the Student Personnel Council, and the Senate Committee on Student Affairs are drawing up recommendations on student records. No wonder the top men in the business leave their doors open to the IBM sales representative, is it? If you have a college degree, and if you're looking for a growing future with a growing company—drop us a line. You may be the mature, intelligent, go-places kind we are looking for. And we could be the company you're looking for. CALL COLLECT OR WRITE FOR AN INTERVIEW Miss Hughes 13M Corporation 1301 Topka Avenue, P.O. Box 1186 Topka, Kansas 66601 Their recommendations may be similar to a statement issued by a meeting in Washington. D.C., last year of national associations concerned with education. IEM is an Equal Opportunity Employer It said, in part: "Institutions should have a carefully considered policy as to the information which should be part of a student's permanent educational record and as to the conditions of its disclosure. To minimize the Other officers besides the deans of men and women file records on students. The business office keeps a record of bills owed KU and whether they're paid; the Student Health Service maintains medical records, and some faculty members make and keep notes on students. Heller, explaining the reasons for keeping records of students, said the University has "a fantastic responsibility. The subject of this month's column is not a paperback, and, in a sense, it is required reading. Required reading, that is, for all who are concerned about their own and their nation's future; about the quality of American life in the 60's, 70's, and beyond. To Seek A Newer World, by Senator Robert F. Kennedy, is a book which poses a simple question: "Whether we are prepared to dare" — dare to admit the failure of enshrined policy when necessary, dare to try bold new approaches that keep pace with "the whirlwind of change and hope and progress." The question is simple, but our problems are awesome and complex. As Senator Kennedy states a few of them: "We are the most powerful nation on earth; yet our young men struggle and many die in a war in a small, far-off country where our power often seems impotent. "We have passed civil rights legislation of a reach and detail unknown since the Civil War; yet never has there been a greater sense of alienation and more open hostility between the races. "We have found material wealth far beyond our dreams of a few years ago; yet perhaps we count the wrong things, for the forms of new wealth seem to destroy as many pleasures as they give." These, and other problems among peoples, countries, and generations, cannot be dealt with in generalities. To Seek A Newer World is filled with Senator Kennedy's specific recommendations for legislative and executive action . . . and for your individual action. Significantly, the book begins with an appeal to, and on behalf of, youth. "The gap between generations will never be completely closed. But it must be spanned; for the bridge across the generations is essential to the nation in the present; and more, it is the bridge to our own future—and thus in a central sense, to the very meaning of our own lives . . ." "Today's young people...demand a limitation upon excessive power. They demand a political system that preserves the sense of community among men. They demand a government that speaks directly and honestly to its citizens." It is Senator Kennedy's clear-cut demonstration that these goals are possible - through joint and personal effort - that makes To Seek A Newer World one of this decade's most important and wide-ranging statements of national strategy and purpose. To Seek A Newer World by Robert F. Kennedy is published at $8.35 by Doubleday & Company, Inc., Garden City, New York. You'll find it at one of the best equipped booksellers in the country — your own college store.