World Crisis Day Discussion Topics Regional Areas of Crisis 1. Berlin 2. Central America 3. South America 4. Africa—South 5. Algeria University Daily Kansan Page 9 United States Foreign Policy— 6. Southeast Asia 7. U.S.S.R. 8. China—Military posture of Red China 9. China—Red China and the U.N. 10. United Nations Nuclear War and Preventive War 12. Genetics 57 KU Seniors Apply for Grants This year 57 KU seniors have applied for Woodrow Wilson Graduate Fellowships — nine more than last year. Bull fights and fiestas are on the Christmas gift list for 60 KU foreign students who will tour Mexico during Christmas vacation. Last year 20 of KU's 48 applicants received grants, the sixth largest number awarded to any university in the nation and the largest number awarded to a public university. Winners of the fellowships, which will be announced in April, receive an award of $1.500 plus fees and tuition for the first year of their graduate study. Bull FightsHighlight Tour of Mexico Two Greyhound buses taking the students will leave Dec. 20 and will return Jan. 2. The tour, which is an annual International Club event, will take the students to Mexico City, Acapulco, Oaxaca, and several other Mexican cities. Peter Ling, Kowloon, Hong Kong senior, who is making arrangements for the trip explained that during the long Christmas vacation a number of the foreign students have no place to go. The International Club therefore has been sponsoring the trip for several years. Ling said the cost for this year's trip is $115 for each student. Plans for the trip will be discussed at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union. KU Museum Having Oriental Display Selections from Katsushika Hokui's "Thirty-Six Views of Fuji" are on display in the Oriental Art Gallery of the Art Museum. Two of the woodcut prints, "The Red Fuji" and "The Wave" are considered by critics to be among the greatest landscape designs in art. The views of Fuji originally belonged to Frank Lloyd Wright, who later sold them to Mrs. Thayer, the founder of Spooner Museum. Japanese color woodcuts will be on display in the Oriental Gallery until the end of the spring semester. The display will be changed once a month. International Club to Meet The International Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in Hoch Auditorium for the showing of the Spanish film, "El Ultimo Couple." Following the movie the club will have its regular meeting in the Jayhawk room of the Kansas Union. CHARLESTOWN, N. H.—(UPI)—A project is under way to restore the site of Old Fort Number Four, which protected a section of the Northeast during the French and Indian Wars. It is located near the Connecticut River. He said a woman living on S. Laredo St. complained another woman had put a curse on her by sprinkling "magic salt" on her sidewalk, making her feel "bad." He said the other woman made the same complaint about the first. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. — (UPI)— Patrolman T. R. Medellin was called to settle a salty neighborhood squabble. Restoration Medellin advised both women to keep their salt in the kitchen. For Seasoning Only 13. Radiation disease 14. Preventive war 15. Shelters—moral aspect 16. Military aspects of blast and radiation 17. Psychology and policy in the nuclear age 18. Russia's propaganda war 19. Economic aspects 20. Military aspects 21. Ethical aspects (nuclear war) 22. Ethical aspects (nuclear testing) Disarmament and Arms Control 23. Unilateral disarmament 24. Problems of disarmament Cold War and Limited War 26. How well are people informed by the Avogadro Process? 25. Military strategy 27. Cross-cultural view of warfare 28. Marxism-Leninism and Soviet Philosophy 30. Totalitarianism and Democracy 29. Communication problems Misc. Cross-Cultural Factors 31. Racial conflicts in a torn world Kansas Patrolmen In Training Here 32. The population explosion A five day training session, the first of seven sessions for Kansas Highway Patrolmen, is being held in the Kansas Union this week. The program is sponsored by the Kansas Highway Patrol and the University Extension. Twenty-five troopers will take part in this week's program. Six other sessions will be held beginning Dec. 4 and 11, Jan. 8, 15 and 29. By the end of the last program all of the state's approximately 200 troopers will have participated. The purpose of the program is to re-train men already experienced in the field and to acquaint them with the latest techniques and developments. Program instructors include representatives from the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other police agencies in Kansas. Frank E. Dance, assistant professor of speech and drama, will instruct a section of troopers on communications and listening habits. Other subjects to be covered in the training include: public relations, ICC rules and regulations, instructions in report-writing, pistol firing, and first aid. At first glance, the KU Alumni Association might not appear to have much in common with the student body. Alum Association Helps Student Aid ALTHOUGH THE MAIN function of the association is to communicate with KU graduates, it also works in co-operation with the Endowment Association and the Greater University Fund—the two principal KU agencies for student aid. But indirectly the association—the largest in the Big Eight with its more than 14,000 members—affects many of the 10,000 students at KU. Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni association, recently explained this aspect of the association's activities. The association, he said, does not solicit funds from alumni members, but is in the position to act as a "scout" for the two agencies of student aid. It often answers alumni requests for information regarding the donation of gifts or funds to the University. PARTLY THROUGH the efforts of the Alumni Association and partly because of contributors outside the association, total contributions to the Greater University Fund last year were $337.000. Private support of the Endowment Association totaled $2,850,504. This amount came from a variety of sources, including endowment income from land donated by alumni members, returns on Endowment investments, private gifts, bequests, and donations from business and industry. Personal-Institutional Factors For Believing the Crises Personal or Institutional Factors For Relieving the Crises 33. Can the individual influence the world crisis 34. Kansas University in world affairs 35. The role of exchange programs 36. World law and or world government 37. Aid to underdeveloped areas 38. Alternatives to war 37. Aid to underdeveloped areas 38. Alternatives to war Bowl Ticket Sales Close Tomorrow KU students and alumni have until tomorrow to purchase tickets for the Kansas-Rice Bluebonnet Bowl game Dec. 16 in Houston, Texas, the alumni office said yesterday. The tickets must be bought separately from the migration accommodations, the alumni office said. The migration will leave Lawrence via a special Rock Island train at 5:14 p.m. Dec. 15, and arrive in Houston, Texas, at 8:45 a.m. After the game the train will leave Houston at midnight and arrive in Lawrence at 3:20 p.m. Dec. 17. After the ninth, the athletic office is compelled to return the tickets to Rice. Tickets are on sale at the athletic ticket office at $5.50. Headquarters for the KU party in Houston will be the Shamrock Hilton Hotel where a reception and brunch will be held Saturday, Dec. 16 at 9:30 a.m. Reservations for this affair must be sent in advance to Herb Cowell, Room 407, 5619 Fanning, Houston, Texas. Tickets for the migration must be purchased at the Rock Island ticket office. Round trip ticket including four meals costs $53.20. Members of the Arnold Air Society and Angel Flight, about 60 students, are going caroling Sunday night. Getting into the holiday spirit, the group will divide in half, and at 7 p.m., each half-group will visit three of six local hospitals and rest homes, spending about 30 minutes on each visit. Air Society, Angel Flight to Carol The hospitals and rest homes to be visited are: the Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Watkins Memorial Hospital, Siroki Rest Home, Dever Rest Home, Mary Crum Home, and Samaritan Lodge. Friday, Dec. 8, 1961 Cuban-Communist Support Expressed MIAMI, — (UPI)—Raul Roa, Fidel Castro's foreign minister, declared formally last night that Cuba is an "inseparable part" of the Communist world. In a speech broadcast by Radio Havana, Roa said Russia and "the whole Socialist (meaning Communist) camp" support the Castroite revolution. The Spanish-language Miami newspaper Diario de las Americas, in an article written before Roa spoke, reported that the Castro regime plans to quit the Organization of American States and join the Russian-dominated Warsaw Pact. The newspaper, quoting "information received today from Cuba," said the change would be made before the OAS foreign ministers meet Jan. 10 to consider the Communist threat to the new world. SAVE UP TO SAVE UP TO 50% on your Diamond Purchase Daniels Jewelry DAN SAMPLES 914 Mass. This Sunday Call VI 3-1086 for Free Delivery Give a Record for CHRISTMAS The Gift That Keeps on Giving CLASSICS, POPS, JAZZ, SOUND TRACKS & SHOWS BELL MUSIC CO. 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 When one has been threatened with a great injustice, one accepts a smaller as a favor.—Jane Welsh Carlyle do you need money to stay in school? College life is educational in more ways than one. 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