NAMT will hold 20th conference The National Association for Music Therapy (NAMT) will meet for their twentieth annual conference Thursday through Saturday at the Ramada Inn in Lawrence. Hosts for the meeting will be the Midwestern Regional Chapter of the NAMT and the KU Music Education department. English conference features two noted American writers Ralph Ellison, author of the novel "Invisible Man," and Warren French, professor of English and chairman of the department of English at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, will speak at the Seventeenth Annual Conference on Composition and Literature Friday in the Kansas Union. William W. Sears, professor of music education, is program director and chairman for the conference. norities" in the keynote speech. Ellison will speak at a luncheon in the Kansas Union Ball Room in connection with the conference theme, "Minority Voices in American Fiction: Authors and Themes." French will speak on "The Novel Against the Establishment: A Montage of Mi- Ellison's "Invisible Man" (1952) was judged "the most distinguished single work" published in the last 20 years by a 1965 Book Week poll of critics, authors and editors. He has contributed short stories and essays to many publications, lectured at New York, Columbia and Fisk Universities and at Bard College, and has been writer-in-residence at Rutgers and visiting fellow at Yale. French has written "John Steinbeck" (1961), "J. D. Salinger" (1963), "Companion to the Grapes of Wrath" (1963) and "Season of Promise: Spring Fiction" (1967). He has taught at the Universities of Mississippi, Kentucky and Florida, at Stetson College and Kansas State University. The conference, open to Missouri and Kansas high school and college English instructors, will begin at 8 a.m. Friday and continue to 3:30 p.m. In addition to the two main speeches, two panels, "The Modern Jewish Novel: Bellow Malamud and Roth" and Contemporary Black American Writers are scheduled. Nearly 600 people are expected, said conference director Thurston M. Moore. Debaters take fourth place KU won fourth place in weekend debate competition at the second annual Massachusetts Institute of Technology Invitational Tournament in Cambridge, Mass. The team of David Jeans, Independence, Mo., senior, and Bob McCulloh, Overland Park senior lost the quarterfinal round to take fourth among 66 colleges and universities entered in the tournament. AWS executive council to meet The national executive council of the Inter-Collegiate Association of Women Students (AWS) will meet Friday through Sunday at the home of Emily Taylor, dean of women. The purpose of the meeting is to plan the agenda for the executive board meeting. Miss Taylor is the adviser-elect of the group. International club dance set Add hard rock to foreign atmosphere and the result is an International Club party, 8-12 p.m. Saturday in the Eldridge Hotel Crystal Room. Featuring the "Soul Messengers," the party will be free for International Club members and dates. Tickets for non-members may be purchased at the door for $1. "Students may join the club at this time. However, we also encourage persons to attend who would like to see what International Club is like," said President Masoud Moyer, Iran senior. PT anniversary to be Saturday Physical therapy students will be observing the 25th anniversary of the KU physical therapy program Thursday. Donald L. Rose, medical director since 1947, will speak at the 8:30 p.m. meeting in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room. Aerospace film slated The KU chapter of the American Institute of Aeronautics was awarded a $400 first-prize by the Bendix Corporation which will be used in a year-long film-making project. Presentation was made to the K.U. chapter for submitting the best program outline in the annual Bendix competition. A carefully planned budget of the awarded $400 was also submitted. The planned film is designed to interest high school students in aerospace engineering and will be distributed on videotapes. Completion should be by May said David L. Kohlman, chairman of the aerospace engineering department. The radio-television-film department will provide technical advice and a department graduate assistant will advise the engineering students producing the film. History Conference. All Day. "www.historyconference.org" Forum Kansas, Washington Official Bulletin Interested in information about the Peace Corps? Want to help plan KU Peace Corps Week? Call Cora Corkill. 9-1-4795. Rogers Ramsas Union. *Carillon Recital.* 7 p.m. Albert Gerke- Today Roten Gallery Print Sales. 10-5 p.m. Kansas Union Lounge. Classical Film 7 & 9 p.m. "Sawdust and Tinsel" Kansas Union Ballroom Tomorrow Jay Jaynes Meeting. 6:30 p.m. Kant- on History Dinner. 6:30 p.m. Honoring Secretarial Seminar. 1 p.m. Big 8 Room, Kansas Union. ctely and Professional Players Record- ing of Shakespeare's A Mid- dle-age Play. said that History. Dinner. 6:30 p.m. Honoring George L. Anderson, Ramada Inn. Room, Kansas Union. University Council. 3:30 p.m. 108 Newcomers Club, 7:30 p.m. Watkins Room, Kansas Union. Special Film. 8 p.m. "Sundays and Cybele." Dyche Auditorium. Experimental Theatre 8:20 p.m. "Summertree" Swartwhort Recital Blake Jay Jaynes Meeting. 6:30 p.m. Kan- 2 KANSAN Oct. 15 1969 Field painted weekly EVERYONE! FOR Seventy gallons of paint and 72 man-hours are required to decorate the end zones in Memorial Stadium for every football game, said Roy A. Taylor, paint foreman for the buildings and grounds department. Open 11 a.m. All Meat U.S. Choice FOOD and FUN Taylor said the end zone patterns had to be redone for every game because new grass is always growing in. The paint itself does not wear off, he said. This is the third year for extensive end zone decoration, Taylor said. "Coincidentally, for the past three seasons," Taylor said, "he has noticed the Jayhawks have been playing better." The paint used is grit color suspended in a latex base. The grit is so coarse spraying the paint is one of the major problems facing Taylor and his crew. RANDY'S RANCH Another problem is the time involved, Taylor said. The buildings and grounds department is not responsible for the maintenance of the stadium but has agreed to lend the athletic department equipment for painting the field. Taylor and the other buildings and grounds employees must do THE BAND Party Time 9 to 12 BEER The design for the homecoming game, Taylor said, will probably be the same as it has been for other games. The south end zone says "Big 8 Conference" and the north end zone features a large Kansas Jayhawk. Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Jack Riegle, a buildings and grounds engineer, designed the end zone decorations. Taylor said the patterns were stenciled on the ground at the beginning of each season but the painting was done freehand on the successive touch-ups. Pitchers $1.00 reg. 5.98 Cups (12 oz.) .25 1811 West 6th the painting Sundays and between 5 p.m. and dark weekdays. When daylight saving time ends for the year the problem of getting the work done in time will worsen, Taylor said. Engineering Grads Where do you go from here? Choose a future, not just a job, by taking a good look at all factors affecting your professional career development. Such as these Bendix advantages Technical challenge Broader horizons Stimulating environment Advancement opportunities Long-range programs Size up Bendix! Get all the facts about Bendix Kansas City when the Bendix placement representative visits your campus. Monday, October 20,1969 Tuesday, October 21, 1969 Or you may write to E. D. Cox at Box 303-U, Kansas City, Mo.64131. Kansas City Division Prime contractor to AEC . . . Equal Opportunity Employer