University Daily Kansan, October 21, 1983 Page 9 CAMPUS AND AREA ON CAMPUS TODAY A SEXUAL HARASSMENT workshop for men sponsored by the office of affirmative action will be from 1 to 3 October at Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union. PHOTOJOURNALISM Students Association will feature Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Paul Beaver at 3:0 p.m. in Alcove D of the Union. AN OPEN HOUSE for pre- physical therapy students will take place from 1 to 3 p.m. in Battiefenbald Auditorium at University of Kansas Medical Center. INTERVARSITY Christian Fellow- ship will meet at 7:30 a.m. in the Pine Creek Community Center. AN ORGANIZATIONAL meeting of the International Association of Business Communicators will be at 3:30 p.m. in 4058 Wesco Hall. "THE BALANCING ACT: Personal and Professional Goals," a luncheon discussion in the series Women Supporting Women: Personal and Professional Development, will be from noon to 1:30 p.m. in Alcove B of the Union UNDERGRADATE BIOLOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union. SUNWATER ROOM of the FOLK DANCE Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. on the second floor of the Military Science Building. SUNDAY ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN Ministries Center will have a supper at 5:30 p.m. followed by a presentation titled "The Challenge of Peace in War and Peace" lead by Sister Barbara McCracken of Shalom House of Kansas City. MONDAY MOUNTAINEERING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Union A GUERRILLA THEATRE protected nuclear armament in Europe will be staged during the 2015 Games. STUDENT CREATIVE ANACHRONISTS will meet at 8 p.m. in the Union, BASEBALL SIMULATIONS Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Porter C of the University. KJIK WILL BROADCAST "Alternative Conversations," a phone-in talk show, at 6 p.m. Missy McKee, Overland park sophomore, attended a Hope award voting box in front of Summerfield Hall yesterday. She said voting had been slow at her box during the day. The Hope Award ballot boxes will not be open today, but seniors may vote from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Monday in room 403 of the Kansas Union. By PETE WICKLUND Staff Reporter 'Day After' to bring CBS to KU The University of Kansas will be spotlighted in two upcoming CBS News features that will focus on ABC TV's Nov. 20 film presentation of "The Dav After." A spokesman for the disarmament group Let Lawrence Live said yesterday that Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kan., had said he would attend a Nov. 21 public town meeting on arms control. CBS WIL. ALSO present an interview Sunday with F. Allan Hanson, professor of anthropology and coordinator of Let Lawrence Live. The interview will be a program morning with Charles Kuralt. Harry Moses, a producer for "60 Minutes," said a crew that included "60 Minutes" host Ed Bradley would be on campus Sunday and Monday to get various opinions about the film, which is a fictional drama about a nuclear attack on the Lawrence and Kansas City area. Moses said he planned on interviewing KU students who had taken part in the filming of the "The Day After" last year. "We'll be talking to people who have been in the film and we'll see if their views have changed as a result of their participation," Moses said. He added that the "60 Minutes" crew would also film Monday meetings of Let Lawrence Live and the KU chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom organization. Steve Bergstrom, Winnetka, Ill., junior and president of the chapter, said that "60 Minutes" staff representatives had approached him earlier this week about filming one of their Bergstrom said that his group was working to get a speaker from the Department of Defense or the Reagan administration to attend the meeting. THE WOULD NOT reveal any names of possible speakers and said his group's appearance on "60 Minutes" depended on whether the film crew's and speaker's schedules could be coordinated. Louse Hamson, a member of Let Lawrence Live and the wife of the group's coordinator, said that Slattery would attend the town meeting at noon, with the mouth Congregational Church, 92% Vermont St. Church, 325 Pearl Street Hanson said the purpose of the town meeting was to allow area residents to reflect on the previous night's presentation. Hanson said that invitations to the town meeting had also been sent to Gov. John Carlin and to Sens. Bob Dole, R-Kan., and Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan. RESEARCH PAPER WRITING Study Skills Workshop Monday, Oct. 24 6:30 to 9 p.m. Council Room, Kansas Union Student Assistance Center FREE Presented by the Student Assistance Center Learn about: - defining a topic * organizing your notes * using the library * managing your time --camp, officer candidates receive four months of leadership training. It's professional schooling designed to sharpen their technical and management skills. Friday, October 28 Kansas Union Ballroom 8:00 p.m. $4.00 Students with K.U. I.D. $5.00 General Public Tickets available at SUA Office 749-2912 $4 Bouquet "Cash & Carry" "give to a friend" --camp, officer candidates receive four months of leadership training. It's professional schooling designed to sharpen their technical and management skills. Sooner Or Later You'll Get Responsibility Like This. In The Navy It's Sooner. You're maneuvering 445 feet of guided missile frigate through the navigational hazards and non-stop traffic of one of the world's busiest ports. But you'll dock safely. Because you know your equipment. Know your equiment You know your men. And even when the responsibility weighs in at 3,600 tons... you're ready. After four years of college, you're ready for more responsibility than most civilian jobs offer. Navy officers get the kind of job and responsibility they want, and they get it sooner. Navy officers are part of the management team after 16 weeks. Instead of boot Then, in their first assignment, Navy officers get manage- ment experience that could take years in private industry.And they earn the decision-making authority it takes to make that responsibility pay off. As their management abilities grow, Navy officers can take advantage of advanced education and training in fields as varied as operations management, electronics, and systems analysis. In graduate school it would cost you thousands; in the Navy we pay you. And the Navy pays well. The starting salary is $17,000 (more than most companies pay). And that's on top of a comprehensive benefits program that can include special duty pay. After four years, with regular promotions and pay increases, the salary is up to as much as $31,000. If you qualify to be an officer in the Navy, chances are you have what it takes to succeed. The Navy just makes it happen faster. Navy Officers Get Responsibility Fast.