Wednesday, November 15, 1967 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 5 ISP backs the pill- Continued from page 1 - Allowing students age 18 and above to live anywhere they choose and to set their own hours without the interference of the administration or other students. - Sponsoring a student committee to evaluate courses and professors and then publish their results. - Eliminating all compulsory floor meetings. - Assisting foreign students in finding suitable housing. - Instituting a pass-fail system for the Western Civilization exam. Investigating the University budget with special attention to the library situation and the building and grounds department. An ASC committee will publish a condensed form of the budget. - Dispensing birth control pills and information on campus to anyone who wants them regardless of marital status. - Investigating the food prices at the Student Union and possibly finding a means of lowering them. - Limiting the undergraduate requirement to 50 rather than the present 60 hours. - Improving the student health facilities. Foreign Students: Interested in International Houses in America for Christmas? St. Joseph, Missouri has office of Dean of Foreign Students. Pre-Law Students; Students interested in attending law school upon graduation are invited to meet Dean Gary Boren, Washington University Louis) on Thursday. November 16 from 9 a.m. to noon at 206 Strong Hall - Prohibiting campus police from carrying firearms. SUA Forum. 3:30 p.m. African, Latin American students on develop- ing nations. John Stuckey, moderator. Forum. Room. Union. TODAY Official Bulletin Computation Center Distinguished in Biological Selenece Computer Center, University of Chicago. "Neighborhood sumerical taxonomy" 301 Summerfield. SUA Forum, 4:30 p.m. "Central School, Union, Hinshaw, Fork, Roop, Room, Carillon Recital. 7 p.m. Albert Gerken. Classical Film, 7 & 9 p.m. "On Approval." British. Dyke Auditorium. German Film, 7:30 p.m. "Willhelm Ball." 411 Summerfield. Archeological Lecture, 8 p.m. "Some Indian Influences on the Art of Romanesque Europe." Millard B. Rogers, of Washington. Spooner Leer-Hall Little Symphony. 8 p.m. Swarthout Rectal Hall. Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "Theatre. Today." Children's Theatre. 1:15 p.m. "William Tell." University Theatre. Study Break Devotions, 9:30 p.m. University Lutheran Church. SUA Forum, 3:30 p.m. "Eastern Europe," Piekalkiewicz, Clenciala, Von Ende, Oestreucher, Forum Room, Union. Math Staff Seminar. 3:30 p.m. "Lip- schitzan Maps and Riemac n Theorem in Banach Spaces." Nachman Aronszain. 119 Strong. SUA Lecture, 8:15 p.m. Ferenc Nagy, Union Ballroom. Fall concert is today The KU Symphony Orchestra will play its annual fall concert at 8 p.m. today in the University Theatre. George Lawner, who is in his second year as conductor at KU after several years as assistant conductor of the San Francisco Opera Company, has chosen a program with emphasis on modern music. Beethoven's Symphony No. 4 will open the program to be followed by "Pacific 231" by the late Arthur Honegger. This piece, which challenges the orchestra's sound-creating abilities, portrays the journey of a Southern Pacific steam engine. presents SUA Poetry Hour Robert Speiss of Madison, Wisconsin poetry editor of "American Haiku" author of "The Heron's Legs" reading his own "Haiku" Approximately 100 scholars will gather at KU Friday and Saturday to discuss the Soviet Union and those countries commonly known as "Slavic." Profs to discuss slavic countries 4:30 Thursday, Nov. 16th Music Room Kansas Union Free Coffee and Doughnuts Participants in the Bi-State Slavic Conference will come primarily from Kansas and Missouri. They will discuss Soviet relations with developing countries, recent developments in Soviet politics, contemporary Communist historiography, Soviet educational policy, and East European philosophy. They will also speak on Hungary's relation to the Soviet Union, Slavic literature in the 20th century, Soviet poetry, the nationality question in Eastern Europe and fifty years of Soviet politics. KU faculty involved in these presentations include; Anna Cienciali, associate professor of history and Slavie and Soviet area studies, "Polish Foreign Policy of the Interwar Period in Soviet and Polish Historiography." Edward Czerwinski, associate professor of Slavic languages and literatures, "Audience Involvement: The Slavic Theater of the Absurd." Stephen J. Parker, assistant professor of Slavic languages and literatures, "Slavic Literature in the 20th Century." Igor Cinnovis, associate professor of Slavic languages and literatures, "Some Characteristics of Soviet Poetry—Yesterday and Today." Officers of the conference are Roger E. Kanet, assistant professor of political science, president; John T. Alexander, assistant professor of history and Soviet area studies, secretary-treasury; and Soviet area studies, III professor of history and Slavic and Soviet area studies, discussant, "Fifty Years of Soviet Politics." KU librarian writes reference book A KU librarian is author of a new book, "Science and Engineering Reference Sources: a Guide for Students and Librarians." The book is by H. Robert Malinowsky, science and engineering librarian at KU, and it deals with methods of literature-searching together with annotated descriptions of over 400 reference books in science, engineering and medicine. identifies the world's best beer drinkers! 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