University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 3.1972 5 e-for Miller inning s his . It is of his are he that I avior ing to money g had hat he crisis. g, but uses. If of her ug and eseudoe- Dansan writing our stu- nd for man in- ing student san francisco sas institute portland oregon tech student budget, I plea For with saturation er cent iplexes) (iplexes) certainly certainly long run Justis. e Junior ee in by the swinging the insider of last reundem, students desire of activity inate is students on owns thatildi be that the ossal hoax destined tition and result of pay for Student onal $2.00 "pinch" book is, it is no noun for and since they wake tello, freshman more Chip Crews Del Brinkman Carol Young Mel Adams off avid Sokoloff. Vickers Hopes for Eban By CARLA DENNIS Kansas Staff Writer Sculptor Finds Art in Kites Tal Streeter's kites on exhibit in Sooner Harold Wilson, former prime minister of England; Anatoly Dobrynin, Soviet ambassador to Russia; and Emanuel foreign minister of Israel. Henry J. Kissinger, national security advisor, are among those being considered as nominees for the John Conard, director of University Relations and chairman of the coordinating committee for the Vickers and Lecture Series, said recently. Sen. Robert Dole, national chair of the party, presented the most recent Victors Lecture. His controver- sive views on special topics presented the lecture to they considered Dole a mouthpiece for the Nixon administration. The other Vickers Lecturers the tate were Lawrence O'Brien; Brice Democratic party and Adm. Elmo Zumwalt, chief of naval THE J. A. VICKERS Sr. Memorial Lecture Series was founded in 1970 when the Vickers family of Wichita contributed $100,000 to the Kansas University association for its establishment. The conditions of the gift specify that two women, each depending on the funds available, a Committee whose membership is appointed by the family family shall agree on the sections and extend invitations The committee member, include the chancellor, Robert F. Vickers, John Eberhart, former Prime Minister of Germany; Regents; the president of the KU Endowment Association, and the President of Engineering, Business, and Law. The first Vickers Lecture was delivered April 30, 1971 by Judge A. Leon Higginbotham Jr., who served as vice-chairman of the National Commission on the Prevention of Violence EACH SPEAKER in the series receives a $1,500 honorarium and travel expenses if he wishes to accept them. Conard said that the series has Sculptor High on Kites By LINDA CHAPUT Kansan Staff Writer Art is stepping down from its pedestal and taking on a more public nature. TAl Streeter said she will be the next KU graduate, spoke at a lecture sponsored by the University of Kansas Museum of Art and the "There are two kinds of art," Streeter说, "Art with a capital 'A' and what you would call real art." Art with a capital "A" is art that embodies both painting and sculpture have both drawn away from their museum orientation and have been used in the past. oriented to the general public. STREETER HAS returned to Lawrence with an exhibition of kites he designed and built while in Japan. The kites, in their first American showing here, are traditional Japanese kites made Streeter said he first became interested in kites when he was working in New York where he observed a vessel of lightning painted bright red and entitled the kite being exhibited in New York's Central Park, in New York's Central Park, and the idea of going up and flying it came when I saw it come up. "All I wanted to do was to keep taking it down and putting it up." STREETER SAID "The Endless Column" was meant to send the viewer's eye up into the sky and that, like his other universe, was meant to 'electrify' the space around the object. "Most of my works are simple and geometric in design," Streeter said. Streeter said that in making his kites he devided from Japanese kite makers in that he used materials that were allowed the motifs of his sculpture. "I accomplished what I wanted with kites in Japan, and that was to put that red line up on a larger Streeter said that when he was in Japan he formulated plans for a new building, the structure, to be called "Red line in the Sky," would be made of concrete 100 feet square and 1,500 feet long. He painted red and had a red glass element at the top. A metal base inside the glass element with a beam that shot up into the sky. Streeter said he had not found a beam. Sreeter is currently writing a book on kites for publication in the United States. His kites will be displayed at Spitzer Hall until May 28. Humphrey and McGovern carried their campaigns into court in election day controversy over the delays. were not limited to Cleveland Humphrey, who said he was "pretty damned mad," sent a supporter into federal court in a hearing on Thursday. The judge of the Cleveland voting hours. Humphey charged that there had been "a complete breakdown of the voting mechanism" in parts of Cleveland McGoverni's allies went into State Senate Court, asking all of the officers in the Cleveland polls closed and that the city's ballots be impounded and that the state's courts be opened. Continued from page 1 HHH Wins Indiana . . . THE ELECTION problems Awards Dinner For Pharmacy To Be Friday The paper ballots ran out in parts of Youngstown. The polls were kept open late there and in Marietta. In Ohio, where the ballot was complex and the count could be expected to proceed slowly in the fall, ballots were machine fouls and ballot confusion delayed the beginning of bailout in sections of Ohio. The School of Pharmacy will have an awards dinner Friday night in the Union Ballroom honoring scholarship winners and recognition to several students, a spokesman from the school said. Mark Barnett, Natoma four- thly pharmacy school, will be the master of ceremonies for the dinner. Barnett is president-elect of the chapter of the American Pharmacists Association. Humphrey raised the complaint about the Cleveland foulups early in the day with the governor, then, at midday, in federal court. Mgo民会的 allies complained to state and federal officials about the voting tieup in Cuyahoga County, later, they met privately with the county met privately with the county board of elections and that their WASHINGTON (AP) -- A Senate subcommittee was con- tended Monday with the anger of a few in-middle-class homeowners who said their neighborhoods are being y federal housing programs representative wasn't admitted. That led to the state court attempt to get the ballots impounded. on Warner Bros. Records WHILE THERE was no presidential preference poll in this at-large delegate contest, there was nothing. The delegate slates were listed beneath the name of their candidate in those statewide Jackson spent nearly three weeks stumping Ohio for votes for his delegates. reg. $5.98 $2'99 KIEF'S Discount Records Malls Shopping Center Discount Diamond Needles The partial returns showed none of them leading. In Indiana, one issue was central; Wallace himself. After Muskie dropped the campaign to Donald Trump, he organized and labor leaders aligned in support of Humphrey, seeking to block the Alabama HUMPREY HOPPED back and forth between the two primary states, but put his hand against me against McGonish. He urged Indiana voters not to "turn back the clock" by supporting him. Nixon faced no major competition in any of the primaries. He lost to Hillary Clinton Tuesday balloting with a hefty lead in committed convention delegates. He had 240%; Muskue led by Drew Perry; Humphrey had 83%, Wallace, 77. been able to offer several speakers this year because Adm. Zumwalt will travel expenses for his appearance and compensation for speaking but asked that the money be used for scholarships for handicapped students. "The committee screens several hundred nominations each year," Conard said, "but only a few that those invited actually come." The lecture series will accept speaker nominations from students or faculty, Conard said. Nominations should be sent to the university. Relations and will be considered by the committee. but the lecture itself was excellent. Zumwalt, O'Brien, and Dole brought interesting ideas to the audience, which were tioned vigorously by students. IT IS TOO early to gauge the success of the series, Conard said. The attendance at the Higginbotham lecture was small. The series' original objectives of bringing useful ideas to the University community and presenting an opportunity for national promotion have been met, Conard said. Caron hooded the series would become a tradition at KU. The students' interest in universal appeal, but all will be interested in saying, he has interesting to say, he 1. Buy a bunch of Fliess pins. You need brown, red, blue, orange, purple and white pins. 2. Now—color in the picture according to these color guide numbers. (1). Black (5). Brown (2). Red (6). Orange (9). Purple (3). 3. Do you not color unnumbered areas. MIAMI. Fla. (AP)—The MIAMI-founded center has released it in November this season's storms, and a woman immediately sent up gale winds. COLOR IN THIS "MINI- POSTER" OF ONE OF THE CANDIDATES! 3. Congratulations! You have created a genuine tail color portrait of someone you love and will be proud not not your favorite presidential candidate, have patience. 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