12 Monday, Sept. 14, 1970 University Daily Kansan --- Members of the University of Kansas football coaching staff will show game films this fall on a weekly basis in Joseph R. Pearson Hall beginning Monday, Sept. 14, Mike Sundermeyer, president of JRP, said. The films will be open to the public and shown every Monday at 7 p.m. in JRP's main lounge, said Sundermeyer. He said that either head coach Pepper Rodgers or one of his coaching staff would offer commentary with the films. KU Game Films to Be Shown Free Rock Concert Planned Five rock bands will play continuously from 3 to 7 p.m. at a free rock concert Sept. 22 on the east lawn of Allen Field House. The Board of Class Officers will sponsor the concert. Steve Childs, Fowler senior and senior class vice-president, said the five bands would be the Flippers, Together, Tide, the Young Raiders, and the Red Dogs. Childs said money for the concert would come from class dues. Childs said the board functioned primarily to oversee the activities of the freshman, sophomore and junior classes. Senior class officers provide leadership for the other board members, he said. KU-Y Youth Friendship to Meet An organizational meeting for the KU-Y Youth Friendship program will be held 7 p.m. Wednesday in the council room of the Kansas Union. All KU students interested in the program are asked to attend Wednesday's meeting or contact Bob Myers at 842-9791 or Jeannie Crain at 843-5800. First Bluford Scholarship Awarded Duke Lambert, Republic of Guyana, junior, has been awarded the first Lucile H. Bluford Scholarship in Journalism. Lambert, who worked for six years as a journalist in Guyana before coming to KU, said the award was $400 for the 1970-1971 school year. The scholarship, according to the KU Endowment Association, was established by contributions in honor of Miss Bluford, editor of the Call, a newspaper distributed in the greater Kansas City area, on the paper's 50th anniversary. Alumni Offices to Be Open The KU Alumni Association offices will be open to visitors from 9 a.m. to noon on the days of home football games in room 103 of the Kansas Union, according to Mildred Clodfelter, assistant secretary of the association. tions—need to be reviewed to provide optimum learning conditions, he said. Chalmers... From Page 1 The chancellor said he had confidence in the University's ability to cope with these challenges and problems. He cited the Student code of Rights, Privileges, and responsibilities as evidence of stability and recent advances in self-government. Later in his speech Chalmers praised other areas of University government. "Beginning this semester we have adopted a new and innovative procedure that should facilitate meaningful, orderly change throughout the University. Faculty members and students working together on every policy-making committee will provide mechanisms for joint efforts at every level of University organization," he said. Opposition to the University and its policies comes from two sides, the traditionalists who cannot understand KU as it is now, and the revolutionaries who want to destroy it, not because of its role in society, but because it is "the vulnerable soft underbelly of that society." "Each opposing group knows that a great and free University cannot long survive physical force," Chalmers said. "One group seeks to provoke such force—the other threatens to impose it—and each group feeds upon the irrationality of the other." HUD Grant... From Page 1 said. "All the Senate has done is to recommend a change." Schwegler was still in the dark about the nature of the $47,800 Sunday. He said he had heard some rumors, but when asked about the new funds and the Senate's action his first comment was, "Bless them." If the cash ever reaches the health service, it will be placed in the same account with $125,000 set aside for the new hospital about three years ago. SCHWEGLER said he was pleased with the HUD subsidization; and he credited pressure from the student body as the most important factor in the realization of the new building. He said the old building had been inadequate for some time. It was constructed for a student population of three to four thousand. Now, Schwegler said, about 18,000 people use the service, including University employees. Last year the service handled approximately 100,000 visits, and the figure increases by several thousand each year. At a special ceremony Friday Chancellor E, Laurence Chalmers Jr. dedicated the John T. Stewart Children's Center in new Haworth Hall. The center is headed by Richard L. Schiefelbusch, director of the Bureau of Child Research. He said two more floors had been added to the wing, there would be special classes for school-age retarded children. Presently the center houses three pre-school classes of children from the Lawrence community, and two classes of children who are retarded or who have learning disabilities. Present for the ceremony were Mr. and Mrs. John T. Stewart III of Wellington, Stewart, son of the late John T. Stewart II, after whom the center was named, provided a substantial gift to help in financing construction of the center, according to Irvin E. Youngberg, executive secretary of the KU Endowment Association. Chalmers Dedicates John T. Stewart Children's Center Schwegler is concerned about delays in construction of the hospital for financial reasons. Since the new center was proposed, about five years ago, construction costs have risen dramatically. Chalmers said in his dedication speech the center would expand the University's mental retardation research in several disciplines. The John T. Stewart Children's Center was one of the objectives of the University's Program for Progress, through which more than $19,600,000 was contributed to the University in the past three years. Three Sparkling round diamonds... echo the magnificent oval center diamond in saying I love you... from $275.00 the set THE COLLEGE JEWELER 809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432 IF THE TREND in recent construction strike settlements continues, he said, the current cost estimates for the hospital will be totally unrealistic even two years from now. Schwegler said he anticipated no major hitch in the plans. After legislative approval in January, construction should start in 1971 on the practice fields behind Watkins. Crosby's In-Law Dies in Accident REDDING, Calif. (UPI) Singer Bing Crosby's mother-in- law died Sunday from injuries received in a traffic accident last week in which three of the entert- ainer's children were hurt. Olive Grandstaff, 68, Fall River Mills, Calif., died from "complications due to injuries suffered in the accident," a spokesman at Mercy Hospital said. The Crosby youngsters, Harry Jr., 12, Mary Frances, 10, and Nathaniel, 8, was released from the hospital Thursday after treatment for cuts and bruises. She was hospitalized with crushed ribs Tuesday after a two-car collision at an intersection four miles east of this northern California town. Soldiers Get OK For Wig Wearing WASHINGTON (UPI) GIs are free to wear wigs that conform to usual hair regulations while on duty and to wear any type they like on their own time, the Pentagon said today. Sports cars are our bag We at Competition Sports Cars understand sports cars and sports car people. 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