Colleges prepare for Oct.15 (Continued from page 1) case classes would be suspended. A speakers' forum will be conducted throughout the day. The Student Senate at Wichita State University passed a resolution stating they would observe the moratorium in the "fact that it was happening" but would not endorse the cutting of classes. Wichita State students, however, are planning to boycott classes. Campus groups are sponsoring speakers, and a demonstration against the war will take place in front of Wilner Auditorium. At Bethel College, Newton, a four-day observance is planned. A large bell has been placed in the middle of the campus. The bell will be rung once every four seconds between 10:30 a.m. and 10:30 p.m. Oct. 15-18, or approximately 40,000 times, once for every person slain in the war. Classes have been called off the day of the moratorium. As a cultural expression against the war Bethel College is presenting anti-war plays and the reading of anti-war poems. Students are being urged to write letters to their senators and representatives protesting the war. Students at Kansas Wesleyan University, Salina, are planning to unite with students from Marymount College in a peace march through downtown Salina. Classes have been called off. At McPherson College, McPerson, the campus newspaper reported a petition calling for dismissal of afternoon classes was being circulated by the students. St. Mary's of the Plains College, Dodge City, is planning a teach-in. Instructors are urged to devote classes to discussion af the war. Students at Friends University, Wichita, are meeting today to discuss activities for Wednesday. No activities are planned at Hutchinson Community junior college, Hutchinson, Neosho County junior college, Chanute, or Kansas City junior college, Kansas City. The president of St. Mary College in Xavier said Friday that plans for the Moratorium at her school were still tentative. A petition signed by about one-third of the college community requesting a pro-peace program for Oct. 15 has been presented to the administration, she said, but the petition has not yet been officially approved. Classes will not be canceled Wednesday, but students will be 12 KANSAN Oct. 13 1969 '72 Party Oct.17 free to use their own discretion in choosing whether to attend. The tentative plans include a teach-in, featuring speakers representing differing points of view about the war, and religious observances. The student government at St. Benedict's College in Atchison has asked all students at the college to refrain from attending classes Wednesday, the president of the student body said Friday. In place of classes, he said, the student government is planning a day-long observance of the moratorium, beginning with a silent public prayer in front of the student union. At Baker University in Baldwin, speakers are scheduled at an off-campus coffee house, the president of the student body said Friday. Proceeds from a fast at lunch will go to the Save the Children Fund for Vietnamese children. During lunch hour two films will be shown in the gymnasium. One will be an anti-war movie and the other will be a film made by the Army, presenting its view of the war. Compliments Ace Johnson At 6:30 p.m. St. Benedict's students will form a candlelight process from their campus to that of Mount Saint Scholastica College on the other side of town, he said. At Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia, the student and faculty senates have passed a resolution stating that a boycott of morning classes is "a legitimate way to demonstrate one's convictions" concerning the war in Vietnam. Organized action will take the At Kansas State College, Pittsburg, students will be asked to wear black arm bands Wednesday by an organization called Students for Peace. form of a rally in the union square. Students for Peace will hand out literature in connection with the Oct. 15 moratorium, urging professors to relate their class discussion to the war in Vietnam, according to John Cully, campus minister for the United Ministries in Higher Education. No marches or demonstrations A mountain of a meal HAMBURGERS come as you are ..hungry are scheduled and the university has made no formal statement. Opposite Hillcrest Center At Fort Hays State College a counterdemonstration group plans to distribute materials indicating their opposition to the moratorium. Student body leaders have requested the faculty to lead discussion of the war in their regularly scheduled class periods. 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