Page 3 Monday, Jan. 13, 1964 University Daily Kansan Drama Students Plan 'Demonstration' Tour Eight KU drama students were named last week to participate in the first "demonstration team" exchange program this spring to be sponsored by the U.S. State Department. The students were selected by a committee made up of Lewin Goff, director of the University Theatre, Jack Brooking, associate professor of speech and drama and William Kuhlike, instructor of speech and drama. The students are Mimi Frink, Lawrence sophomore; Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Dalen, Lawrence graduate students; Vincent Angotti, Independence. Mo., graduate student; Sharon Scoville, Kansas City special student; Karin Gold, Overland Park senior; and Paul Hough, Topeka, freshman. The group is financed by a $15,000 grant from the U.S. State Department and will spend April and May in Warsaw, Poland; Belgrade Yugoslavia; and Bucharest, Rumania. The selection of the candidates was approved by faculty members of the Speech and Drama Department. Candidates were selected on the basis of talent, attitude and grades according to Goff, but of primary importance in the selection was the students' ability to be a good-will ambassador for the United States. 1912. Press. k 22. rates: moon versity Law- Editor The group is called a demonstration team because while in Europe members will attend classes at professional theatre schools in Europe. There they will demonstrate techniques used in university theatres throughout the United States. The group will perform "typical" American theatre presentations including drama, comedy and musical productions. Editor During their stay, the team will live close to their European counterparts who may be coming to the United States to study if the new program should be developed further by the State Department. nager Goff made preliminary arrangements for the program when he was in Europe last year. He talked with officials at U.S. Cultural Affairs offices in Warsaw, Belgrade and Bucharest and also discussed plans for the program with State Department officials in Washington. KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) Iceng may have caused the crash of a small plane that struck a skyscraper here Saturday night, a team of federal investigators indicated today. He listed other possible factors as the plane's course, instrument troubles and power failure. Plane Crash Is Analyzed Killed in the crash were Jack David Gorham, 27, the pilot, and his next door neighbors, Lawrence G. Trapp, 32, Trapp's wife, Helen, 29, and their son, William, 2. Four Kansas City residents, returning from a trip to southern Missouri, were killed when the plane smashed against the top of the 28-story Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. Building. Two employees of the nearby Continental Trailways Bus Company were bruised when Gorman's body came hurtling through the roof of a baggage storage shed where they were working. Their bodies were hurled onto rooftops. Wreckage showered a wide area. At the time of the crash, light snow and light rain were falling and there was fog. An investigator for the federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said the plane had no de-icing equipment and that icing could have developed very suddenly in such weather conditions. The wreckage of the Mooney Mark 20, a four-place plane was hauled by truck yesterday to a hangar at Fairfax airport in Kansas City, Kan., where the investigation will be conducted. the university shop's JANUARY SPECIALS Entire Stock WINTER JACKETS Wools — Nylons — Cottons Waist Length or Knee Length (some with removable hoods) 20% OFF Entire Stock ALL-WEATHER RAINCOATS ALL MADE-TO-MEASURE CLOTHING With Zip-Out Body & Sleeve Liners 20% OFF Suits Sportcoats Topcoats (Individually Tailored to your own measurements) Choose from 500 fabrics 20% OFF Rental TUXEDOS (Not All Sizes Available) Black — Lightweight Now $25.00 When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds Forget to pick up your first edition of the Jayhawker? Issues are now available at the Jayhawker office, 115 Union, between 2:00 and 5:00 p.m. daily. More issues of Campusology are also available.