Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, Oct. 25, 1963 Hindus to Give Lessons in Yogi The East will try to teach the West Nov. 15 when two Hindu philosophers come to Lawrence to give instruction in Yogic exercises and Hindu scriptures. Wami Jyotimayananda and Swami Lalitananda, his disciple, will arrive in Lawrence on Nov. 15 as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lekh R. Batra, 932 Maine, Lawrence. A SWAMI is about the same as a monk or run in the United States. The term refers to both male and female. The swami is not associated with a particular church. Kansas Editors To Meet at KU For Workshop John McCormally, editor of The Hutchinson News, and Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism, will describe their experiences in African journalistic workshops on the annual Kansas Editors' Day program here tomorrow. They were members of a fourman team of American journalists that conducted seminars for African journalists from 15 countries in July and August at Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Dar es Salaam, Tanganyika; and Lagos, Nigeria. An estimated 300 persons are expected to attend the Editors' Day activities in Flint Hall, which also will include announcement of the name of the 47th Kansas editor to be elected to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame by Kansas editors. The annual election began in 1931. For a number of years two men were chosen annually, but in recent years only one man has been selected. The day's program will begin at 9:30 a.m. with the traditional Wrangle Session, presided over by Stanley H. Stauffer, president of the Kansas Press Association and general manager of the Topeka Capital and Journal. In this session the editors will discuss problems proposed for discussion by Editors' Day participants. The editors will be guests of Chanceller W. Clarke Wescoe at a buffet luncheon in the Kansas Union and will attend the Kansas-Oklahoma State football game as guests of A. C. Lonborg, director of athletics. Special displays will be exhibited in the William Allen White Memorial Reading Room relating to the Hall of Fame including David Low, the late British cartoonist, some of whose originals will be included in a display; and the summer workshops in Africa. WHATCHA MACALLIT DANCE PLAY CARDS LIVE IT UP TONIGHT AT HASHINGER HALL FREE ADMISSION SPONSORED BY ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY RESIDENCE HALLS. 9:00 - 12:00 Swami Lalitamanda was raised and educated in the United States. She will assist Swami Jyotirmayananda in giving talks and discussions on Hindu and Indian scriptures and giving lessons in Yogic exercises and the practice of meditation. Batra met the two philosophers while in India a few years ago. He said they are not being sponsored by any group in Lawrence but are coming on their own. LETTERS ARE being mailed to all Indian students at KU to tell them of the dates the Swamis will be free to speak and perform the exercises, he said. They will be in Lawrence for a week or more depending on the number of engagements they have. There will be a meeting at Batra's home during the week of Nov. 15 so that Indian students may meet the Swamis and talk with them. Any group interested in having the Swamis speak and perform may contact Mr. Batra so that arrangements can be made. Official Bulletin Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road. TODAY American Society of Tooling and Manufacturing Engineers. Leaves Foward 6:00 p.m. Field Museum, Washington Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30, 829 Mississippi, "Jesus Christ and the Same" TOMORROW Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. Catholic Masses 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m. St. Luke's Episcopal Church, 908 North Ford Street Confessions 4-5 bd. 7-8 p. SUNDAY Catholic Masses, 8 a.m. St. Lawrence Lesser of Two Evils No Sale. Reverend Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road. 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Fresher Hall. Faith and Life Seminar. 9:15 a.m. Westminster Center. The Church, Justice: 216 Westminster Drive, Suite 403. Oread Friends Meeting, 10:30 a.m. Broadway welcome, Quaker meeting and worship. SUA Chess Club, 2 p.m. Kansas Union. Berkshire Center, HIRC Speaker, Westminster Center, HIRC Speaker. "Vatican II: Second Spring," 8 p.m. Kansas Union. Panel discussion of revolutionary changes emerging from the Euclidianism James Fainnery, S.J., David Schmidt, S.J., F. James Finnerty, S.J. all of St. Mary College, St. Mary, AUSTIN, Tex.—(UPI)—"Sam," a University of Texas student who gave no further identification if about to be drafted. He put a sign on a bulletin board that advertised: "Help. Need wife quick. I'm being drafted and must get married by Oct. 31. Call GP 2-5720." ACTON, England—(UPI)—A brewing company said today it had turned down the Rev. Richard Parsons' offer to open a beer garden in his Anglican church graveyard here. "We were flabbergasted," a brewery spokesman said. "But we turned it down because it might tarnish our image." After the Game SENIOR DAY it's the Post Game Buffet 5:00-8:30 Eldridge Hotel Bar-B-Q Ribs, Chicken, Roast Beef, Ham Many taste-tempting dishes Adults $2.25 Children $1.25 Listen to the Eldridge Scoreboard after the game — Station KLWN THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE: MORRIS JOHNSTON "Pioneering in the space age," is the way Morris Johnston (B.A., 1957) describes his job as Data Sales Manager of Southwestern Bell. Morris's job is a new one with the Telephone Company, brought about by the mushrooming growth of computer-processed business data, and the need to distribute this data quickly to widespread locations. Morris came to his present position from the manager's job at Waxahachie, Texas, where he was responsible for all commercial operations. Now, as Data Sales Manager in Dallas, Texas, he is helping to pioneer the development of this new business method-a communications system for computers. To be a part of this development in the pioneering stage is both challenging and rewarding. Morris Johnston, like many young men, is impatient to make things happen for his company and himself. There are few places where such restlessness is more welcomed or rewarded than in the fast-growing telephone business. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES