Tuesday, October 31, 1967 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 13 2500 expected for Science Day The 16th annual Science, Mathematics and Engineering Day at the University of Kansas, on Saturday, Nov. 11, will feature displays, speakers and counseling for interested high school students. H. Glenn Wolfe, associate professor of zoology, is chairman of the event which is expected to attract about 2500 high school students and teachers. Last year, 3,000 attended. Hampton W. Shirer, associate professor of electrical engineering and comparative biochemistry and physiology, will speak at 9:30 a.m. in Hoch Auditorium on "Biotecometry — Monitoring Animal Behavior by Radio." At 10 a.m., Clark E. Bricker, professor of chemistry, will describe "The Blue Bottle," an example of chemical reactions. Students will spend the remainder of the morning receiving counseling from staff members of P-to-P entertains foreign students People to People will host a Halloween party tonight at 7:30 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union to show foreign students how Americans celebrate Halloween. Anyone interested may attend. Costumes may be worn. The dirty dozen In the afternoon, students will view displays and exhibits sponsored by various departments. the various departments. They will be discussing jobs available in particular fields and current research problems. COPENHAGEN —(UPI)— A band of twelve young students "invaded" a small island in a Copenhagen public lake Sunday and declared it a republic. The students declared war on the United States Vietnam policy and seven hours later abandoned their new republic and went home at afternoon tea time. Cooperating to present the program are the Schools of Engineering and Architecture, Education, Pharmacy, the Museum of Natural History and the departments of astronomy, botany, chemistry, comparative biochemistry and physiology, entomology, geology, mathematics, microbiology, physics, psychology, radiation biophysics and zoology. University Extension is coordinating the whole program. Two KU seniors will give their senior recital, at 8 p.m. Wednesday, in Swarthout Recital Hall. Seniors give vocal recital The students, Shirley Williams, Olathe, a soprano, and Thomas King, Kirkwood, Mo., a tenor, will present a one-hour program featuring the works of Bach, Mozart, Repighi, Pulene and Verdi, said Don Scheid, assistant dean of the School of Fine Arts. Miss Williams, who is majoring in theater and voice, participated in Campus Talent 1966 and sang the lead in the opera. "The Magic Flute." King is a music education major. His minor is voice and he is a member of KU's Chamber Choir. East End of 9th Street VI3-0956 Two "horrible" films, "The Phantom of the Opera" and "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" will be shown in their original silent form in a special Halloween double feature at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Horror films to be shown Computer languages fulfill Ph.D. degree requirements Can you speak Algol, Cobol, or Fortran IV? If so, you're one up in the chase for 22 of the Ph.D. degree programs at KU. Algol, Cobol, and Fortran IV are computer "languages." Proficiency in one of them now rates with a reading knowledge of French, German, or Russian in meeting the traditional two-foreign-languages requirement for about half the doctoral programs at KU. That is, competency in computer sciences can be substituted for one of the two foreign languages needed for the Ph.D. degree in anatomy, anthropology, biochemistry, business administration, chemistry, comparative biochemistry and physiology, economics, education, electrical engineering, environmental health, entomology, microbiology, physics, clinical psychology, experimental psychology, social psychology, somatopsychology-rehabilitation, radiation biophysics, sociology, speech communication, speech pathology and audiology. The KU Graduate School faculty, in these areas, believes the computer as a research tool is as valuable as the knowledge of a foreign language. And, as with the language requirements, the candidate must pass an examination in the computer language and program for the computer, a problem assigned by his academic department. Homecoming '67 Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong Sat., Nov. 4th, 8:00 p.m. Allen Field House TICKETS NOW ON SALE ★ Information Booth ★ Student Union ★ Summerfield Hall ★ Bell Music Co. Inc.-925 Mass. ★ The Sound Inc.-Hillcrest $2.50 $2.50 - $2.25 - $1.75 Gaymode Sheds Light on the tintables in Gold and Silver! in Gold and Silver! Gaymode $ pumps with rayon peau de soie uppers or glittery silver effects, that tint to the color of your choice at no extra charge to you. Lined in rich leather. Match them up with a tintable clutch bag. Shoes $7.99 Clutch Bag $2.99 Like It! Charge It! Open Monday & Thursday till 9:00 p.m.