Thursday, September 28, 1967 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 3 SDS protests Marines in Union Protesting Marine Corps recruiting on the KU campus, the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) manned a table in the Kansas Union yesterday on the same floor as the Marines. The SDS members gave impromptu speeches, passed out literature and collected donations at the unauthorized table. They were not challenged by Union administrators. During the afternoon protest, demonstrators stripped the Marine recruiters' table of literature. However, the Marines replaced the pamphlets and leaflets and ignored the SDS action. The demonstrators also hung posters reading, "Marines eat people," and "Murder is my business—apply next door." Rick Atkinson, Belleville senior, said in one of the speeches that "school is no place for the military. We're in school for an education. We're here to learn how to survive with people, not how to kill them." "We had many more people than I expected," said Hamilton Salsich, instructor of English and advisor to SDS. "I think we have accomplished what we set out to do today—to protest the Marines' presence and say that we are against the war they represent." Captain James G. Custar, one of the Marine recruiters from Kansas City, said the recruiters had never run into any demonstrations like this before. "Of course," Custar said, "we've got a job to do and we aren't here to mess with the students." Authors article Charles B. Saunders, professor of business administration at KU, said in an article, "Can Entrepreneurs Become Administrators?" that there is a large difference between the founding of a business and its sustenance. The success of the entrepreneur depends on his ability to manage, and organize the business toward a sound development, said Saunders. He suggests the entrepreneur enroll in an intensive management program or undertake serious study of management theory. $14,500 landscaping project is finished Near Danforth Chapel, one of the final phases in the remodeling and landscaping of the Fraser Hall area is being completed. Brush has been cut away, sidewalks are being paved and a parking lot is being built near the KUOK will return Oct. 9 chapel in the next to the last step of the "Fraser project," said Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor in charge of operations. An "inexpensive Jack Parr show," weekly sports specials, and varied types of music will highlight University radio station KUOK this year, when it begins the year's broadcasting Oct. 9. Bob Wilson, Hutchinson senior and station manager of KUOK, promises an expansion of the popular "After Nine" show. This year, "After Nine" will feature panel discussions with speakers such as Rev. Ron Sundbye, minister of The First Methodist Church of Lawrence. The sports specials will feature Jim Ettinger, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, back-up quarterback to Bob Douglas, El Dorado sophomore, during football season. When sports attention goes to the other side of the campus, the field house, All Big-Eight guard Jo-Jo White, St. Louis, Mo., junior, will be featured. Wilson said the station will play "hard rock" from their 3 p.m. sign-on until 8 p.m., then will tone down to jazz and popular music until midnight, when KUOK leaves the air. Programming will also include ABC network and local news. The station serves two purposes at KU, Wilson said. The first is to acquaint the radio and TV student with the actual operation of Talent Unlimited tryouts tonight "Talent Unlimited" tryouts will be held tonight at 7 in 402 Murphy Hall and at 7 p.m. Friday in Swarthout Recital Hall. The winners of the auditions will perform from 4:30 to 6 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 7, in the Kansas Union Ballroom for Parents' Day football game. The KU Kicks Band and the Gaslight Gang will perform, too. Student performers who are looking for a path to Hollywood or Broadway may get their break tonight. "The area around the chapel had become shabby and overgrown," he explained. "An effort is being made to make the chapel both more "beautiful and more useful." a station, and, secondly, to provide the student with news and entertainment. Both KUOK's administrative and announcing staffs are made up entirely of students. "Talent Unlimited" is a continuation of a troupe formed last spring to entertain at a military posts in the area. As a state-owned station, KUOK is not allowed to compete with other stations. Last year, however, the station met all its expenses by sales of advertising. The state restricts the broadcast of KUOK to five wat units in each residence hall. With this strength, the student has little chance of receiving the broadcast as far away as the hall parking lot. Danforth, frequently used for weddings, has had, in the past, no place for those attending the wedding to sit outside. To remedy this situation, a patio with redwood benches is being added north of the chapel. The $14,500 project also includes the building of a small zoned parking lot east of the chapel. This lot is being built on the former route of Lilac Lane, now moved to the west side of Danforth. Building of the parking lot includes the construction of a retaining wall, curbs and storm sewers. The lot will be accessible only from Lilac Lane south of the chapel. Pete Boedy, Atlanta junior, dreams of Playmate Diane. The sweater, a classic V-neck of lambswool, by Pringle, exclusively for our shop. 922 Massachusetts Three-in-one OXFORD, Miss. — (UPI) — The University of Mississippi has received a $133,000 federal grant for research on King snake serum as a possible cure for cancer, hemo- philia and the common cold. 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