Faculty will debate credits The question of giving academic credits for military science courses will be debated again. This time at the faculty meeting of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at 4:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Forum Room. Delbert Shankel, associate dean of the college, said discussion at the faculty meeting would center on whether academic credits toward graduation requirements should be allowed for military science courses. Shankel said a motion would be introduced calling for discontinuation of academic credits for military science courses which have not been integrated into the regular University curriculum by 1971. The question of academic credit was not permitted by the University Senate during its session on ROTC. The Senate decided that the matter should be left up to the individual schools and colleges to decide. Student basketball season tickets will go on sale Wednesday morning at Allen Field House, with the 7,500 tickets reserved on a first-come first-served basis. Season tickets go on sale The tickets, good for all 11 regular-season home games, cost $4 for students and $9 for spouses. To get a student season ticket, a student should take his KU-ID and current registration certificate to the east entrance of Allen Field House. Sales end Friday at 4:30, or whenever the 7,500 tickets are gone. The Opera Comique, Paris, burned May 25, 1887, killing 200 persons. KU administrators meet in Kansas City Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. and other KU administrators were in Kansas City Monday for a meeting of the University Development Committee. FAILURES DECLINE NEW YORK—The rate of business failures fell a sharp 22 percent in 1968, according to the Insurance Information Institute. The number of failures hit 9,636, the lowest point since 1953. The average liability per failure was $97,-654, down from the 1967 average of $102,332. 8 KANSAN Nov. 18 1969 Others from KU who attended the meeting were Richard Wintermote, director of the KU Alumni Association and Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University. Yesterday's session was for preliminary discussion of developments the committee (principally an alumni group) will be asked to become involved with, said James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor. Chalmers has a break from travel and talks Tuesday, Gunn said, but Wednesday he has budget hearings in Topeka. Thursday he has a Board of Regents meeting and Friday he will address a luncheon in connection with a meeting of the Kansas Association of Radio Broadcasters. Friends give gift Barbara Lancaster, wife of professor of aerospace studies Raymond Lancaster, received a gift from some of her "long haired friends" Friday in celebration of the November moratorium. Fellow members of her Topics and Problems of the Generation Gap class presented her a necklace of white and blue daisies with red centers. They also gave her a crocheted handbag of red, white and blue. According to members of the Young Socialist Alliance, Blackstock will appear Thursday evening, Nov. 20. Neither time nor place have been re-set. Nelson Blackstock, editor of the Young Socialist Magazine, and invited speaker at last night's SUA Minority Opinions Forum, was reportedly delayed in San Francisco, Calif., and unable to speak. Speaker delayed At Shakey's... where it all happens! STUDY BREAK SPECIAL SMALL PIZZA (Sausage, Pepperoni, Beef) PLUS DRINK (Beer or soft) $1.25 10 to 12 P.M SHAKEY'S 544 W.23rd VI 2-2266 NEW! "LIVE" by 3 DOG NIGHT reg. $4.98 $299 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Southwestern Bell Telephone Company An Equal Opportunity Employer PERSONNEL RECORD NAME Bruce Wilson AGE 24 POSITION Accounting Office Supervisor RESPONSIBILITY Supervises data processing staff handling $10 million in customer billing. Southwestern Bell...where college graduates start in decision-making jobs.