12 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, November 28, 1967 Prete to lecture on Italian studies Sesto Prete, faculty member of Fordham University, will speak at 7:30 p.m. Monday in 308 Dyche. His subject will be "Classical Studies in Ferrara, 15th Century." Sponsored by the department of classics, Prete's lecture will deal with the study of the Humanists of the Italian Renaissance, Prete is a scholar in Latin "text criticism" and Italian Renaissance writings. He has edited Greek and Latin texts of the 14th and 15th centuries. Born in Italy and educated in both Italy and Germany, Prete has lectured throughout the U.S. and Europe. In 1954, he was selected as Fulbright Scholar and he received a Guggenheim fellowship in 1962. He has written several articles on the "Humanus concept" and a book, "Codices Barberiniani Latini." Recital will be given by Woodwind Quintet The University Woodwind Quintet will give a Faculty Recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall. They will play three contemporary pieces: "Quintet No. 2" by Alvin Etler, "Quintet" by Alan Hohvaness and "Sextet for Piano and Woodwinds" by Wallingford Rieger. Quintet members are John Boulton, flute; Robert Stanton, oboe; Don Scheid, clarinet; Austin Ledwith, bassoon, and Dale Bartlett, French horn. Pianist Jane Abbott will accompany the Quintet in their last work. McNamara— Continued from page 1 But McNamara himself has denied any serious division with the Joints Chiefs, and official sources emphatically denied that this played any part in the secretary's reported departure. During his time at the Defense Department, the brilliant McNamara has managed to impose a strong central control on a sprawling agency—once thought to be unmanageable that spends over half the federal budget. But besides his more publicized accomplishments, the secretary has also indicated an interest in putting the nation's military establishment to work as a force for social good in the United States. He has instituted a program to train men leaving the armed forces for civilian jobs, and another to take into the Army previously rejected men whom he thinks would benefit from service training. He has also backed strongly efforts to wipe out racial segregation around military bases where servicemen must live and to make the draft "more equitable." Everyday more and more KU have things to buy, sell and rent. --you can see it everyday in the students are finding that Kansan Lawrence merchants are joining classified columns. Rm. 111, Flint Classifieds work best when they the Kansan Classified bandwagon Hall-Adv. Memo to Seniors M-P: Mendellsohn Nietzsche O'Neill Pochahontas Gentlemen (and you, Pokey): Please be advised that it is now your turn to be photographed for senior yearbook pictures. Cost is $5.50, and additional prints are available on order. Call Estes Studio for an appointment before Christmas break. VI 3-1171