Thursday, September 28, 1967 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN --- 9 Continued from page 1 of Canterbury House on Louisiana Street. Moms' mum sale to end this Friday Friday is the last day to order mums for Parent's Day. The mums may be purchased from KU-Y representatives in the living groups or from the KU-Y office in the Union. The mums come in three colors -white, yellow and bronze—and cost $1.50 each. Last year, over 2,000 mums were sold, said Tom Moore, executive secretary of the KU-Y. B&G crew finds bicycle up a tree Sure parking space is scarce, but there must be space on the ground somewhere. Parking bicycles in trees just isn't done. At least it wasn't done until Tuesday when a KU buildings and grounds crew found one 15 feet off the ground in a tree on the south side of Sunnyside, near Control Station Four. (That's down the hill from Watson Library.) The bike may be claimed at the Traffic and Security office in Hoch Auditorium. Keesling to quit? Has Dave Keesling, president of the junior class resigned? No one knows. Not even Keesling himself. Rumors of Keesling's resignation were thick at the All-Student Council (ASC) meeting Tuesday night. Keesling, Herington junior, said Wednesday night he had not resigned, but that the was considering it. He would give no reason for his possible resignation. If Keeesling does resign, Jim Elake, Topeka junior, now junior class vice-president, will take over the office. KU chutists stress safety The recent sky diving disaster over Lake Erie has not caused members of the KU Sport Parachute Club to lose enthusiasm for the sport. Roger McDanield, Osborne senior, says safety is stressed in the club and that all members have confidence in their equipment and training. He said each member is required to have at least 10 hours of ground training which involves learning proper chute packing and falling techniques, McDaneld, a veteran of 85 jumps, supervises the teaching of safety at the club. He notes that sky diving is not necessarily an expensive sport. Parachutes, he says, can be purchased from surplus stores at a cost ranging from $50 to $500. Cost of plane rental for club members is reduced because some members own a five passenger Cessna 180. McDandel says men and women are welcome in the club. Salsich said he favored the Union building for classroom space because the new university should give freshmen and sophomores "whom we never see" an opportunity to participate without having to walk far. One woman instructor wondered if the KU administration would approve of the new university since, she said, "KU is not really concerned about giving undergraduates a 'whole' life." But Salsich spoke again, saying administrators he had spoken to "seem to be quite willing to go along with it." Before the faculty gathering dispersed, a decision was made to begin recruiting students at an unchduled meeting in two weeks. IN LAWRENCE, THE NUMBER ONE CASHABLE CHECK IS A JAYHAWK CHECK IN A HANDSOME KU CHECKBOOK. When in Lawrence, do as the Lawrencians do: write your checks on Number One, The First National. But write them on your own Jayhawk check, and you're immediately identified as a Number One Student. (Makes check cashing as easy as back home!) Even small accounts are practical; there's no service charge on Jayhawk accounts. Just a dime-a-check as you use them. Helps you keep your balance. Stop in and get your first 50 checks, free. Get known at the First, and you're known where it counts—at cash registers all over Lawrence. Come in to the Number One Student Banking Center, right downtown, Eighth and Massachusetts. Now.