Page 3 Around the Campus Panel Will Discuss Laredo to Play College Athletics In Concert Cours To defend athletics against accusers who feel that an athletic program is a detriment to a university will be the purpose of the panel discussion sponsored by the KU-Y at 8 tonight in the Forum Room of the Union. Christopher Stuart, instructor of English, will moderate the discussion of "Intercollegiate Athletics on Trial." Members of the panel are C. A. Leone, professor of zoology; Charles Oldfather, professor of law and James Gunn, assistant to the Chancellor on University relations. All are members of the Athletic Board. Also on the panel will be Frederick Samson, associate professor of physiology and Roy Edwards, an alum from Kansas City who is a former member of the Athletic Board. The panel also will consider athletic scholarships, athletics as a cultural rite, how much athletics contribute to a university's budget through the support of alums and whether athletics have lost their true meaning and have fallen into the realm of big business. AEC Project Head Speaks Edward A Martell, director of the Atomic Energy Commission's Sunshine project, will speak on "The Influence of the Atmosphere on World-Wide Fallout" at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 411 Summerfield. The lecture is sponsored by Sigma Xi, national honorary scientific society. A former child prodigy will play his violin at 8:20 p.m. tomorrow in the University Theatre. Jaime Laredo, 18 year-old Bolivian violinist, who made his concert debut at eight, will play in KU's Concert Course, its third attraction. Mr. Laredo, born in Cochamba, Bolivia, came to San Francisco in 1948 and gave his first full recital after just two years' acquaintance with the violin. Three years later he played with the San Francisco Symphony directed by Arthur Fiedler. When he was 15 Mr. Laredo made a ten-concert tour of Peru, Bolivia and Puerto Rico. Tickets for the concert are available with I.D. cards in the Fine Arts office only. For his program here, Mr. Laredo will play sonatas by Guisepee Tartina and Gabriel Faure, Adagio in E Major and Rondo in C Major by Mozart, Rondo brilliant in B Minor by Schubert and Nocturne and Tarantelle by Karel Szymanowski. Radiation To Be Discussed How to detect radium and strontium in human bone will be discussed at 7:30 tonight by an Army reserve officer. Second Lieutenant LeMoine Cunningham, U.S. Army Reserve will speak on the "Detection of Strontium and Radium in Human Bone" in room 105 of the Military Science Building. Block Seats Available For Sunday Concert The deadline for reserving blocks of seats for the Dukes of Dixieland concert Sunday has been extended to tomorrow evening by the Campus Chest committee. Organized houses may order blocks of 20 or more seats for the concert. Solicitors in each house may turn in the orders and money tonight and tomorrow night from 7 to 9 in the Activities Lounge of the Kansas Union. The drawing for block seat locations will be held at 9 p.m. tomorrow. Individual seats can be reserved from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. each day this week in the Information Booth on Jayhawk Boulevard and in the Kansas Union. Marvin to Discuss Iran Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism will speak about his experiences in Iran to members of Sigma Delta Chi, Theta Sigma Phi, Alpha Delta Sigma and Gamma Alpha Chi at 8 p.m. Thursday in the English Room of the Kansas Union. Life Saving Fashion NEW YORK — (UPI) A lifesize mannequin with a breathing apparatus and fleshlike plastic covering is being used to train students in the technique of mouth-to-mouth artificial respiration, the Public Health Service reports. Plastic valves prevent the dummy's lungs from inflating unless the head is positioned properly by the student. Tuesday, November 28. 1961 University Daily Kansan Dental Duty NEW YORK — (UPI) — A survey by the American Dental Association shows that the average dentist in private practice works a 43-hour week. But three out of every eight dentists work more than a 45-hour week. The 43 hours are distributed this way: 34 hours at the dental chair, four hours doing laboratory work, two hours doing other office work, and three hours in free office time. The average dentist, it was reported, takes a three-week vacation each year. Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you planning to get married? Come Out to See PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS 1912 West 25th St. FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED - central air conditioning - carpeted - off street parking - garbage disposal - laundry facilities 1/2 block - play area for childrer Phone V1 2-3416 office VI 3-8253 home Latin Peace Corps May Train at KU The University appears to have passed a major hurdle on its way to becoming a training center for a Peace Corps project in Costa Rica. While several months of further negotiations will be necessary to determine whether final approval will be given to the project, a tentative program designed by faculty members last September has gained the unofficial approval of the Costa Rican government and the interest of Washington Peace Corps officials. If approved, the program would establish KU as a training center next summer for 25 Peace Corps delegates to Costa Rica. AFTER THEIR two-month training period at KU, the delegates would be sent to aid in the development of secondary education in rural Costa Rica. Participants in the program would be selected from throughout the United States on the basis of their abilities to: - Teach basic sciences on the high school level. - Teach English on the high school level. - The government-financed program would have a two-year duration. - Perform counseling and guidance services. John P. Augelli, chairman of the KU Latin American Area Studies program and in charge of developing the tentative program offered by KU to the Costa Rican government, explained the present status of the program. "Our program has been submitted to various officials in Costa Rica and has won the approval of the Costa Rican minister of education and the tentative approval of the present Costa Rican cabinet," he said. He explained that President Mario Echandi of Costa Rica could not officially commit the Costa Rican government to support of the program because Costa Rican elections will alter the composition of the Costa Rican administration. "PEACE CORPS officials in Washington are aware of our interest in this program and have invited us to discuss the program with them early in December." But Prof. Aurelli said he felt the program would be officially approved by the new administration. Prof. Augelli said the idea for the program was born last May when George R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, wrote to Peace Corps officials in an effort to learn what part KU could play in the Peace Corps program. KU is especially interested in participating in a program involving Costa Rica, he continued, because the University already has developed close ties with the Latin American country through a two-year-old faculty and student exchange between KU and the University of Costa Rica. Art Instructor Wins Prize at Exhibition Other KU artists represented in the exhibition were Robert Sudlow, assistant professor of drawing and painting; John Taleur, assistant professor of drawing and painting and Thomas Coleman, instructor of drawing and painting. Harold Boyd, assistant instructor of drawing & painting has won second prize of $150 at the Centennial Exhibition of the American Association of Land Grant Colleges and Universities. The exhibition opened Nov. 12 at the Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City, Mo. It is better to risk saving a guilty person than to condemn an innocent one.—Voltaire Mr. Boyd's prize-winning intaglio, "Souvenir," was entered in the student art work, and was one of six prize-winners from the 240 entries by faculty and students of the 65 universities and colleges in the association. The Centennial Exhibition will be on view through Sunday. WHEEL ALIGNMENT BRAKE SERVICE WHEEL BALANCING FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP 229 Elm VI 3-2250 ANY CLOTH Men's-Child's-Ladies' CLIP THIS COUPON COAT Beautifully Dry Cleaned Beautifully Dry Cleaned and Hand Finished. 59℃ ca. Reg. $1.09 CLIP THIS COUPON CLIP THIS COUPON TROUSERS ● Skirts (plain) ● Sport Shirts ● Sweaters 29c ea. Reg. 59c Deluxe Cleaned, Hand Pressed Drive In and Save - Open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Except Sunday - 1300 West 23rd St. VI 2-0200 SAME DAY SERVICE Fri. & Sat. In by 9 a.m. Out by 5 p.m. ---