Monday, July 1, 1974 University Daily Kansan in brief LEANDER A. MENDYK, director of bands at the University of Wisconsin at Stevens Point, has been a pointed assistant professor of band and assistant director of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp for 1974-75. Mendyk will assist in the administration of the entire KU band program. FELIX MOAS, professor of anthropology and East Mason studies, read a paper; "Acculturation and Culture Change: Reflections on the Japanese Family and Culture" to an international university June 10th at Rutgers University, Milan Italy. THE KU PANHELLENIC Association will have a formal rush August 16-19 for upperclass women and transfer students. Deadline for the registration is Aug. 1. ROBERT T. AANGENEBRUG, associate professor of geography, has been chosen as senior research specialist at the U.S. Bureau of the Census. He will work for a year with the Bureau's Statistical Research Division, evaluating geographic programs and developing long-range research programs in computer graphics. PROSPECTIVE VOTERS may register July 1 from 7:30 to 10 p.m. or July 2 and 3 from 1 to 7 p.m. at the Edgewood Homes Community Building, 1600 Haskell Ave. The registration drive is being sponsored by the Lawrence League of Women Voters. DAVID KATZMAN, professor of history, will lecture on "People of Ige's World: Black Life in White America" at 7 tonight in 341 Murphy Hall. A BUS TO Kansas City's Starlight Theater will leave Robinson Gymnasium at 6:30 p.m. wed., July 10, for the Yugoslavian production of "Braavice." Starlight tickets can be purchased that evening for $1.25 to $6.50. Bus tickets, costing $3.50, can be reserved at 108 Robinson or by calling 864-3373. KU FACULTY and staff members who have filled out forms requesting parking permits for the coming academic year may visit www.ku.edu/hochland Parking Division office in Hoch Auditorium, StudEx also approved a recommendation of the Office of Affirmative Action and the Student Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Committee on the publication of job openings in the work-study program. The Office of Affirmative Action is responsible for mental newsletters and on bulletin board. In other action, StudEx discussed the formation of a 10-member board to review policy for intramural sports. The board would formulate budget plans for intramural sports. The deans of men and women, or their designates, and the two directors of intramural programs would also be board members. King . . . From Page One A recommendation to end selling student mailings lists was made yesterday by the Student Affairs Dept. StudEx also discussed the use of student activity fees to pay for a synthetic floor in the school. The Student Senate recommended last spring that not more than 60 per cent of the total cost of the project, or a maximum of 40 per cent be paid from fees collected before 1996. Beisner said that only $139,000 of the money had been used and that other projects were now being suggested by the athletic association. John Beiner, student body president, said the mailing lists were used primarily by airlines and magazine publishing firms who mailed advertising to freshmen. The action to stop the sale of the lists will apply to the shops outside the University, Beiner said. the other two persons "because they were worshining a false idol." King, who was not preaching Sunday, said he was sitting with the congregation when 'this man got up with a pistol in each hand and was shooting everywhere. StudEx Seeks Stop to Selling Student Names "The man's crazy. There's nothing that can be done with a like it than," Krug 86. He said when he got to his fallen wife, he asked her, "Honey, where are you hurt?" She tried to tell him something but couldn't, he said. 'Menagerie' Auspicious Simple Set Enhances KU Production Abernathy, who succeeded Mrs. King's son as head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), said he visited Chenault in jail and the man told him the slaying was part of a conspiracy to kill civil rights leaders. A family spokesman said her body would lie in state at Ebenezer Church today and tomorrow, with funeral services to be held Wednesday. Abernathy said Chenault told him that Abernathy himself was No. 3 on a list that included Williams, head of the Atlanta SLC, and Jackson, who once ran the Chicago-based PUSH and now heads the Chicago-based PUSH (People United to Save Humanity). Mrs. King was pronounced dead after arrival at Grady Hospital. By RITA HAUGH Kansan Reviewer "The Glass Menagerie" by Tennessee Williams is the first of the theatrical offerings in this summer's KU Theatre Festival. It is an auspicious start. Two things that have delighted me in a decade of attending KU plays are the innovative set designs and the always appropriate, yet never obtrusively noticeable, "Menagerie" is a play about common people with real problems. At its simplest, this is the story of a shrewish mother who wants to marry off her daughter, while her son seeks adventure outside his mundane existence. "Mageniere" lived up to my expectations. The set is simple. There isn't a door to the "terrace";—the fire escape—so the actors pantomime opening and shutting the door. Along the back of the stage are fienn, torn panels of nodeness material, almost like cubebes hanging over a half-remembered scene. But it's not that easy. Amanda, the mother, is a faded Southern belle transplanted to a walk-up apartment in pre-World War II St. Louis, Laura, her The title of the play comes from Laura's collection of glass animals. Her days are spent in a private world caring for her glass objects and listening to old records. daughter, is crippled. Tom, the son, works in a warehouse and writes poems in the review Amanda also lives in her own world, recalling the glories of the parties and gentlemen callers of her girlhood. Tom finds escape in the bottle and in movies, where actors show adventure to those who lead drab lives. Kathy Sheldon is a shy, withdrawn, delicate Laura. Doristow (Tom) is particularly effective when he functions as the Greek chorus. Enhancing his words are sound help convey the tension in the closing scenes. Those who have complained in the past about not being able to hear actors will be happy to know that audibility is not a trait for those sitting in the back of the theater. Her Southern accent creates more problems than her volume. Jim, one of Tom's co-workers, cannot dinner one night. He thinks he is just having a meal with a friend's family. Amanda believes she has finally found a gentleman caller for her daughter. But Laura is frantic when she discovers who the guest is—the boy at across the nake in chore class, the boy who asked to her, the boy she had a crush on. Maureen Hawley (Amanda), like Bristow, is a member of the KU Resident Acting Company. Several times when she is talking off-stage she is difficult to understand. My favorite of the characters is Jim, played by Paul Schreiber. It isn't really fair to single out one character as a favorite, because all do well in demanding roles, showing good characterization and a variety of moods and emotions. Other performances of "Menagerie" are *Fri*, July 9, *Sat*, July 6, and *Thursday*, July 25. Student tickets cost $1.50, which is certainly worth the experience of high-quality entertainment. Go see it. Marzluff to Go to Realty Business Nixon . . . Navy Captain Joseph O. Marzluff, commander of officer Naval ROTC at the University of Kansas, had never been to Kansas before he was offered the position at From Page One present, which presumably would freeze agreement ABM systems at one for each country, be announced Wednesday in a summit-ending communique. Ziegler said Nixon would appear on Soviet television tomorrow night, then make a personal televised report to the American people the next night on results of the summit conference. Ziegler said Nixon speak during a refueling stop in Maine. From there, Ziegler said, the President will go to his home at Key Biscayne, Fla. (NAP) Nixon and Breznev continued their marathon summit on the Black Sea coast yesterday, after which the President remarked: "We've made a lot of progress." Ziegler followed up Nikon's remark with the qualification that much remained to be done, an observation echoed by Prayda, the organ of the Soviet Communist party. Breznjev, who carried the conversation as he and Nixon posed for pictures at the start of the day's session, declared with a smile that everything on anything. Now we can take a rest. After talking for more than four hours at Breznev's seaside home a few hundred yards from Nixon's borrowed villa, the two men met on a plane for more than two hours along the coast in Canada. American officials gave few details of yesterday's discussions, but Ziegler said they dealt with arms control and European matters that he did not specify. It was assumed the two men discussed proposals to impose sanctions which has stalement East and West for years. Pravda declared in an editorial, "The third round of the Soviet-American conversations proceeds in a businesslike, open and democratic manner in the atmosphere of equality on both sides. "Much remains to be done. But there are grounds to hope that the present dialogue will be as fruitful as the two previous ones" in 1972 and 1973. President and Mrs. Nixon will fly to Minsk today for a state hacehoon and breath-laying appearances at two hospitals. They will return to Moscow for the night. KU in 1969. But then again, Marzulf had flown to New York before he went to the U.S. Naval Academy. Marmillhus has apparently enjoyed both the ocean and Kansas. He will be retiring at 10 a.m. today in ceremonies in the Watkins Room of the Kansas Union after spending 30 hours there. After retirement, he will be employed by a local real estate and development firm. "All the events of the past five years kind of melt together. But the first year was the hardest," Marzuff said recently. "My wife told me the story that she never unpacked." Mairzhuill that those early years were rough times for the ROTC program. In the spring of 1989, the annual ROTC review was disrupted by protesters. Shortly after his arrival, a rock-throwing crowd broke all the windows on the north side of the Military Science building. Marzulf said he thought his bigest job was to show to people "We weren't any good at it." Marzulff was on the University Senate Executive Committee and the University Council. Marzulff is proud of the fact that he was elected with the most votes of anyone on campus when he ran for reelection to the council. $54,661 Given For Research Two grants totaling more than $54,600 have been awarded to the department of special education, according to Edward L. Meyen, professor of education. Mona Brook, Lenexa graduate student, received $9,661 for doctoral research. Her thesis will investigate the competency of computer scientists and awarded the grant on a competitive basis. The second grant was awarded through the Kansas Neurological Institute. The special education department will receive a $45,000 sub-contract to develop a training program for teachers of the profoundly handicapped. Maven said. Meyen said the program would develop specific competency areas and instruction. Up-to-the-minute listing of rental housing available in Lawrence. FREE RENTAL SERVICE LREx The University of Kansas Theatre Festivals present "The Glass Menagerie" by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS July 5,6,25 University Theatre ...Murphy Hall 8:00 p.m. Admission: $ ^2 10^-$ KU Students $ ^1 10^-$ Marzluff has three sons, two whom are present on active duty in the Navy. His brother is a graduate of the Army. Reservations 864-3982 In addition to his other decorations, Marshville holds the Legion of Merit with a V correction During the 1950s, in addition to sea duty, Marzluff thrugged at the Naval ROCT unit at Miamun University (Ohio) and spent two years at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School at Monterey, Calif. Marzluff was stationed in Vietnam before assuming as director of the Mine Warfare School in Charleston, S.C. He came to KU from Charleston. During those early years, Marzliuff said, "I tried to show people that there was some muddle ground. I think I was successful." Following his graduation from the Naval Academy, he attended in the invasion of Okinawa in 1948 beaten by a naval group that provided aid to Turkey. THE WORLD OF WILLIAM INGE The Thursday University Daily Kansas incorrectly identified a group of University of Kansas faculty members studying financial exigency as members of the Senate Executive Committee. They are members of the University Senate. The Senate is writing proposals that may go before the first University Senate meeting in the fall. The faculty members studying financial exigency are not connected with those faculty members from the American Association of University Professors (AUP) who are studying the possible effects of a unit, according to Grant Goodman professor of history and East Asian studies and president of the local AUP chapter. TACOS $3.50 per Dozen Casa de Taco 1105 Massachusetts 843-9880 Emerald City Antiques Quality Furniture Craftsman Quality Restoration Just North of the Bridge Visit the Land of Ahs Interested in Wilderness Discovery? BACKPACKING ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING Parlor B, Kansas Union, July 2.7:00 p.m. CANOE TRIP GENERAL MEETING Parlor A, 7:00 p.m. ELEVEN POINT TRIP (July 20, 21) Organizational Meeting, Parlor C. July 17, 7:00 p.m. NORTH FORK TRIP (July 13, 14) Organizational Meeting, Parlor C, July 10, 7:00 p.m. Cross Over The Bridge to sirloin LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Place To Complement Our Fine Dining Tuesday Through Saturday We Are Featuring Our motto is and has always been . 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