Photo by Burt Lancaster Rusty roost Birds have taken over an abandoned University of Kansas signpost at Naismith Drive on Lawrence's "Food Broadway," 23rd Street. Classics professor to open humanities lecture series Dr. William A, Arrowsmith, a University of Texas classics professor, will open the 1969-70 Humanities Series with a lecture, "Towards a New University," at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Union. During his visit Arrowsmith, who is the recipient of three awards for excellent teaching, will speak to classes and seminars and confer with students and faculty members in English, humanities, classics, theater research and East Asian studies. Arrowsmith received his B.A. and Ph.D. at Princeton University and his M.A. at Oxford and was a Rhodes scholar from 1948-51. He has taught classics and humanities at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Conn., the University of California at Riverside and since 1958, the University of Texas. He was chairman of the classics department at Texas from 1964-66. In 1967, he was promoted to professor of arts and letters. Oct. 9 1969 KANSAN 11 Arrowsmith won the Piper award, the Bromberg award and the Morris L. Ernst award. He was a Woodrow Wilson fellow, a Guggeheim fellow and a Phi Beta Kappa visiting scholar-lecturer in 1964-65. He is a widely-recognized translator of the classics and is a member of the executive committee of the National Translation Center. Arrowsmith founded Chimera and has held editorial positions on several other scholarly reviews and journals in addition to publishing many articles. Arrowsmith's lecture ushers in the 23rd year of the continuing Humanities Series which brings distinguished American and foreign scholars to the KU campus for three-day visits. while more than 100 investigators, including FBI agents, examined the area. Several hours after the explosion, United Press International received a special delivery letter in which an anonymous group of "revolutionaries" claimed responsibility for the bombing of the Whitehall Street center. The letter ended with the phrase, "Nixon, surrender now!" None of the six administrators and security employees in the building were injured. Over 50 pairs $4.00 & $5.00 1107 Indiana 4 p.m.to 7 p.m. Thursday and Friday Operations move as bombing result NEW YORK (UPI)—The U.S. armed services will remove their local draft processing, induction and recruiting operations to the safety of Brooklyn's Fort Hamilton as a result of the bombing of a Manhattan induction center, it was announced Wednesday. An explosion wrecked the fifth floor of the Whitehall Street induction center shortly before midnight Tuesday and left it looking "like it had been damaged in World War II." said Fred Goldberg, the center's press spokesman. The floor was sealed off WIRE RIMS Choose any look. Make it yours. Then Norelco will help you keep it Because no matter which look you choose, your beard still grows. It still needs to be trimmed and shaved. Norelco handles that Choose a look. Norelco will help you keep it. Its pop-up trimmer will keep your whiskers and sideburns shaped the way you want them. The 3 floating heads will shave the parts of your face you want shaved. And inside the floating heads are 18 self-sharpening blades that shave as close or closer than a blade every day. Without nicks or cuts. The Norelco unique rotary action keeps the blades sharp while it strokes off whiskers Every time you shave. Then, when you're finished, you just push a button and the head flips open for an easy clean-in inh Now make another choice. Choose the cord model or the Rechargeable. Both will help you keep your look. But the Rechargeable will let you do it anywhere. For up to three weeks. Because it gives you almost twice as many shaves per charge as any other rechargeable. Look them over. The choice is yours. Even on a beard like yours. ©1969 North American Phillips Corporation, 100 East 42nd Street, New York. N.Y. 10017