Page 7 Membership Meeting Scheduled For KU-Y KU-Y will hold its first membership meeting this year at 7:00 p.m. tomorrow in the Big Eight Room on the Kansas Union. Each of the area chairmen will explain his phase of the KU-Y program. KU-Y is a service organization which influences the students, faculty and community. Perhaps its most well-known project is the Rock Chalk Revue, the satire on campus life, presented by the student living groups. KU-Y also sponsored the Yale Russian Chorus which gave a concert here last spring. Coffee hours and current events programs feature discussions of campus, national and international affairs. Sceptic's Corner offers an opportunity for students to discuss moral and philosophical questions at various times during the year. KU-Y sponsors the Watermelon Feed for new students during Orientation Week and the Model UN assembly held each spring. The KU-Y freshman program sponsors a model US Senate for freshmen. These freshmen also sell mums for Farent's Day and sell freshman sweatshirts. The design will be decided on later in the fall. STUDENTS having trouble with their grades may sign up for the KU-Y tutor service. Upperclassmen on the Dean's honor roll are invited to act as tutors. KU-Y is also of service to the Lawrence community. The adolescent guidance program gives upper-classmen at KU the chance to become acquainted with Lawrence high school students. Students also assist with the Lawrence teen town dance, through their community service project. Through the teachers' assistant program, Lawrence teachers receive help from KU students. These students perform jobs which leave the instructor free for more teaching time. Through the Old Folks Visitation program, KU students visit old people's homes, write letters for them or read to them. Through the hand-capped children's program, students take handicapell children to the University football games. The director of the University psychology clinic will discuss "Clinical Psychology in the Sixties: Changing Roles, Goals, and Responsibilities" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union. PsychologyClub To Sponsor Talk The lecture will be given at the first meeting of the undergraduate psychology club. The speaker, Dr. James Stachowiak, who is also an assistant professor of psychology, is the former chief psychologist at the Wyandotte County guidance center. He spetr three years training at a Veterans Administration hospital. The meetings are open to all students. Lectures, films, and field trips are planned for the year. Football Tickets Still Available to Students Season football tickets are still available to students for $1.50 at the ticket office in Allen Field House, Monte Johnson, public relations director of the athletic department, has announced. Students who have already paid for their tickets can pick them up at Allen Field House until 4:30 p.m. Friday. The enrollment certificate must be received, showing fees have been paid, and presented at the ticket window to get the tickets. Regular reserve tickets for one game are $4. General admission tickets are $2.50. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results Wednesday. Sept. 25, 1963 University Daily Kansan Vox Populi To Hold Meeting Tomorrow Vox Populi Party will hold its first membership meeting of the year at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. Tom Bornholdt, Topeka senior and Vox president, said election of officers and the executive council will highlight the meeting. Three vice-presidents, a secretary and a treasurer will be elected. The executive council will consist of Bornholdt, the five new officers and four additional students. Bornholdt said he will also explain the Vox committees and ask that members indicate their committee preference. Bornholdt said five Greeks and five independents will sit on the executive council. The four members of the council who are not officers will be elected from the living group which does not have its quota of five filled. The opening meeting will be proceeded by a meeting of the old executive council at 7 p.m., in the Pine Room. ALTHOUGH NEITHER of the Rockefeller's is a Catholic, the Vatican still takes a strong viewpoint on the subject of divorce and remarriage and although an unusual—but not unprecedented—exception was made for the governor, it was not made for his second wife. However, Vatican sources said that it had been agreed before the audience was granted that Mrs. Rockefeller would not attend. The Vatican newspaper was asked not to mention the fact that Rockefeller had seen the Pope. Normally, the newspaper publishes a list of persons received by the Pontif. Not since Soviet Premier Khrushchev's son-in-law, Alexei Ubei, saw the late Pope XXIII has such secrecv surrounded an audience. VATICAN CITY — (UPI) — New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, whose divorce and remarriage caused a political stir in the United States, had a secrecy-shrouded meeting with Pope Paul VI today. Rocky, Pope Confer Secretly Since the Catholic Church strongly opposes divorce, Vatican sources described the audience as unusual and said there was some consternation among prelates because the Pontiff agreed to receive Rockefeller. ROCKEFELLER'S second wife, who also has been divorced, did not attend. The governor's press secretary, Robert L. McMullan, said after Rockefeller arrived last Monday that the governor has a number appointments with various people in Europe, including an audience with his Holiness. At none of these meetings will Mrs. Rockefeller accompany the governor. He added that no significance should be attached to the fact that she is not going to accompany him to the Vatican. All photographs, even by the official Vatican photographer, were prohibited and regular Vatican reporters who are normally allowed in the ante-chambers during such audiences were kept out.