KU directory out Tuesday The KU directory will go on sale Tuesday in the Kansas Union Bookstore at 75 cents students and $1.25 to non-University buyers. This earlier publication date results from computer printouts for copy on all but a dozen pages and taking student names from the original enrollment roster rather than waiting until all fees had been paid. State clergy meeting planned Members of the Kansas Clergy Economic Education Foundation will be at KU Saturday for their annual meeting. The meeting will begin at 10 a.m. in the Kansas Union Regionalist Room. Bill Chestnut, University Extension Building, is the coordinator for the meeting. Administrators to meet at Union Preparation for the 1970s will be the goal of the fall conference of the Kansas Association of School Administrators Saturday through Sunday at KU. The first session Saturday evening will be in South Junior High. Other sessions will be in the Kansas Union. E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., Chancellor of KU, Kent Frizzell, attorney general of Kansas, Robert Bennett, state senator from Prairie Village, and Herold Regier, associate professor of education at KU, will be among speakers at the conference. K-State, MU tickets sold out The Kansas State and Missouri football games are sold out, Monte C. Johnson, assistant director of the athletic department, said today. Johnson said there are still tickets available for the Oklahoma State and Colorado games. Tickets for the game at Nebraska are still available in the ticket office, but the unsold tickets will be returned to Nebraska after this weekend. Dates for the sale of tickets for the Iowa State and Oklahoma football games have not yet been made available. Johnson said. Museum highlights photo essay "Portraits of Kansas Natural History," a photographic essay by Charles Enyeart, Curator for Education at the KU Museum of Art, is now on exhibit at the KU Museum of Natural History. Enyeart took the photographs at the Quivera National Game Reserve near Hutchinson during a two-week camping trip, he said. The collection includes photographs of landscape and wildlife. The Museum of Natural History is open weekdays from 8:30 a.m. to 4:45 p.m., and Sundays and holidays from 12:30 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. The collection will be on display for several weeks and copies of the photographs may be ordered through the Museum Gift Shop. Rights Group to expand program The Kansas Advisory Council on Civil Rights will have its annual membership meeting Saturday in the Kansas Union Big Eight Room at 10 a.m. The meeting will feature the presentation of a broadly expanded program base. The new program of the Council includes Indian affairs, police-community relations and state employment practices. Mrs. Nathan Shechter, chairman of the Executive Board, said the challenges of changing times were not being met in Kansas, and the Executive Board had responded to this situation with an increased civil rights program for the coming year. Homer C. Floyd, Executive Director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights, will report to the Council on the work, status and new programs of the Commission. Nine join faculty The School of Architecture and Urban Design has nine new faculty members this fall. They are Fount T. Smothers Jr., associate professor; Wayne Drummond, David M. Griffin, James Harley Jr. and John R. Smart, assistant professors. Also teaching are Yi Shong Chen, instructor, and Robert N. Neuman, assistant instructor. Steven B. Whitacre is a visiting assistant professor in this semester. 2 KANSAN Forum urged to observe Moratorium on Oct.15 By JULIE THATCHER Kansan Staff Writer Support for the Oct. 15 Moratorium was advocated at the Faculty Forum luncheon Thursday by Harry Shaffer, associate professor of economics, and David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president. "As faculty members at this University, each of us wear two hats. We serve as a teacher and researcher in our field and also as an American citizen and human being." Shaffer said. Nearly 40 KU faculty members were present to hear Shaffer explain why the day should receive special observance.Awbrey outlined the history of the Student Mobilization Committee and the events planned for Oct.15. On Oct. 15, he said, the professional hat must be put aside. "I hope that for the Moratorium, business as usual will stop." Shaffer said faculty members should either cancel classes and make then up later or devote their regular class to discussion of the war. Those who felt an obligation to their duties as instructors, he said, should remember, in the past classes have been dismissed for many other reasons. Instructors should make an individual judgment about the cause, Shaffer added. "I myself cannot carry on business as usual or I would feel remiss as a citizen of this land, as a human being and as an educator," he said. Awbrey told the group many interpretations of the Moratorium had developed. In some areas the concept of racism had been included, although peace was the major goal. "Generally," he said, "it will be a day of national education about the Vietnam war." The beginning of the Moratorium on the KU campus, he said, was accidental. In June he sent in a card saying he was against the war. Later he got a reply and learned former Eugene McCarthy supporters had formed the Student Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, Abwrey said. From that beginning "one of the most dynamic groups on campus" has evolved. Awbrey said they have done a tremendous job of planning. "I'm very excited. They have arranged a great number of alternative education classes for Oct. 15," he added. He added the Student Mobilization Committee planned to place proctors in every building so there would be no harassment and classes could function as usual. Awbrey agreed with Shaffer and said, "an individual commitment has got to be made. Each of you must decide if you want to make a commitment to alternative education classes and to peace." Awbrey considered it significant that the Moratorium had caused faculty, students and administrators to unite. "It's one of the first times in several years persons can become involved." Last Day to Cancel Courses. All Day. Official Bulletin Kansas Dietetic Association Fall Meetings Day Kansas In- nation Today Several instructors felt class should be held. They said the opportunity should be used to find out how students felt. Popular Film. 7, 9 & 3.00 p.m. "A Mother to a Woman, Kansas Union Ballroom." A biology professor said he planned to devote his classes to a consideration of the biological aspects of the war. 21st Annual Savings and Loan Institute, Kansas Union. Awbrey answered questions concerning the proposed expansion of the Moratorium. Nationally, the observance has been scheduled to increase by one day each month. Shaffer said he agreed with their plans because they would not be conducting "business as usual." Football 1:30 p.m. Kansas State. Memorial Stadium. He said these plans would probably not be carried out. Instead there would be marches in San Francisco and in Washington, D.C., next month. Locally, Awbrey said, there might be a march in Topeka. Popular Film, 7 & 9:30 p.m. A Man and a Woman Kansas Union Boyhood Kansas Association of School Ad- ministrators speaker. South Junior High School In response to questions that the Moratorium might be misunderstood by Kansas, Awbrey said editors of Kansas newspapers met with Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmer Jr. two weeks ago. The Governor has also been informed about the event by the Chancellor, Awbrey said. KU Cricket Club Practice. 11 a.m. East of Robinson Gym. Kansas Association of School Administrators. 1:30 p.m. Kansas Union Carillon Recital. 3 p.m. Albert Gerken. Popular Film. 7 & 9:30 p.m. "A Man and a Woman" Kansas- Union Battles Plans for community involvement in the Moratorium were outlined by the Rev. Otto Zingg, associate minister at the United Campus Christian Fellowship. He said community participation had been difficult to accomplish because people were afraid, "They won't express themselves publicly because they feel it will hurt their businesses." One businessman told Rev. Zingg, "We don't have academic freedom in the community." There will be several programs, Rev. Zingg said. The morality of the war will be the topic at a breakfast, civic club presidents will attend a luncheon and there will be a town meeting in the evening. Rev. Zingg told faculty members to "talk to your neighbors who are not connected with the University and urge them to become involved." Shaffer said leaflets would also be distributed and there would be at least one 15-minute radio report. During the discussion several conflicting views about the war itself were expressed. Next week the group plans to devote the entire meeting to this topic. Some of the faculty members present signed a petition that will appear as a newspaper advertisement in support of the Moratorium. It read, "This day is different. We will use this day to show our concern with the continuance of the Vietnam war." An intoxicating new adult game! SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR AND YE PUBLIC HOUSE 544 W. 23rd VI 1-2266 Lawrence Travel with SUA and Enjoy 40 vs. NEBRASKA Activities Include: - Bus Trip - Tickets Meals SATURDAY,OCT.18-ONLY $16.00 Hurry! Contact SUA Before Oct. 11