University Daily Kansan Monday, September 25. 1972 --- leased visit that needed by the entire out off been on by enanced persistent frequent likely to mention use of encrypt to mbrer. just incipient his at- with Israel to the days and postsage advertised expressed Kapsan Photo by STU BEAIA Stig Breeler Neemaner Mickle Alpke Crews Sherman Wardert Weard Nermaner sleepee Zanatella Capsle Capele Sokoloff børgerdes m Manley n Kiewald greenberg ne gaine carol Dirks m Larkin Students, Faculty, Officials Join on Committee Burge, Dillon, Schultz and William Perdue take part . . . Union Memorial Corporation Elects Its Executive Committee Officers for the Kansas Union Memorial Corporation board of directors and the other members for the corporation executive committee day during a Corporation meeting in the Kansas Union. Thomas W. Van Dyke, Kansas City, Mo., alumnus, was elected president of the board of direction for the University of 1972-73 year will be William Balfour, vice chancellor of student affairs, vice president; Katherine Green, vice adviser and Ronald Mammill contrepriser, treasurer. Elected to the executive Kathy Allen, student body vice president and Topaka junior; Jennifer Grace, student Union; David Dillon, student body president and Hutchinson senior; Tuck Duncan, Wilmette; Mike Pinkney, Lincoln; Lawrence graduate student committee besides Van Dyke, Balfour and Hamilton were: Natalie Rolph, Lawrence junior; Chuck, Sack, SUA graduate; Michael, student; Elizabeth Schultz, associate professor of English; Emily Dixon, de women of Death; Dick Winterstein, director of the Alumni Association. meetings, but she will not be an official member of the executive committee. Under new guidelines begun this year, the executive committee combines the old Union Board and the board of directors. Giele will take minutes of the Advisory committees to the executive committee will be formed later. KU Community Prepares Parents Day Festivities The corporation is also composed of three union staff members appointed by the Student Senate three faculty appointed by the Faculty Senate, and seven faculty appointed by the Alumni Board of Directors. ACTIVITIES for Parents Day saturday will give parents the opportunity to learn about academic schools, dine with their son or daughter and attend the school day. By KATHY TUSSING Kansan Staff Writer Offices of several schools and departments of the University of Kansas will be open Saturday morning. The School of Architecture and Urban Design will sponsor a Parents Day program. William Williams, the school's chair, said two purposes of the program were to give parents the opportunity to see what their students were doing and to make sure parents are ready to parents to answer questions. THE PROGRAM will include a graduate freshman through the graduate level and a dean's meeting with the parents at 11 a.m. Offices will be held. The School of Pharmacy in Malott Hall will be open for visitors from 9 a.m. to noon. Departments and deans' offices of the School of Engineering will be open between 10 a.m. and noon. Other academic offices to be open on Parents Day will be the School of Education, the physical and the School of Business. Most organized living groups are planning luncheons for the students on daughters are new students living in University residence halls are invited to join them for lunch at 11 a.m. in their MOST FRATERNITIES will serve a pregame buffet and playoff kickoff driving to Les McLaughlin, Dallas senior and Interferaternity Council president. Some members hold their idle-alls at this time. senior and panellenic sororites might organize sororites might organize brunches or buffets individually. Nothing is planned by the administrator. Scholarship halls have been urged to have special luncheons for the parents according to Rex Perry, who is chairman of All Scholarship Hall Council president. ASHC will also be distributing Parents Day pamphlets. Dame Paula A $2-a person buffet will be served from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the ballroom of the Kansas Union. Also at the Union, the cafeteria and the Prairie Room restaurant will be open from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The Hawk's nest snack bar will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. AFTER VISITING academic offices and dining with their parents, KU students can take a trip to Florida-KU-Florida State football game. Gina Sante, Prairie Village Football game tickets are available from the ticket office at 10:30 a.m. and also sold by 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Saturday at the Field House and after 10 a.m. at the windows of Memorial Stadium. Mums will be on sale Saturday. Cwens, the sophomore women's honor society, has been taking up leadership for two weeks, according to Elizabeth Ervin, Parsons sophomore and Cwice vice president. The yellow or white mums are long-stemmed with a pipe cleaner shaped in the initials KU. They will be on sale Saturday at the Union the stadium and Pearson Hall in Sellars Pearson hall for $1.50 THE TIME of the half-time ceremony is the story of a rookie football player who said the program would begin with Bill Haley and the Comets. band selections include: "Flying Purple People Eater," "Eater," "Yardyard," "Delah," "Go Down Gamblin" and KU fight songs. After the game, Acting Chancellor Raymond Nichols will join students and parents for a visit to the main lobby of the Kansas Union. Judy Long, Salina junior, Thursday was named was the Chairman for 1972-73 by the anheilinic President's Council Panel Picks Rush Chairman International Club Faces Dissent Long, who is a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, will assume duties immediately. By MIKE LEWIS Kansan Staff Writer Elections for Panhellenic President are scheduled for the week of Oct. 9. After much controversy and a five-month delay, the elections for International Club officers have been completed. It remains unclear how many of the new administration or the fears of the old will be realized. Two weeks ago a slate of candidates, headed by Abdullah Aladawani, Kuwaiti junior, was approved to support from a coalition of Arabian, Iranian and Latin American students. Members of the administration leave office claimed the Arabs and Iranians would join the club as a committed platform for political discussion. One Iranian student claimed the national faction was in favor of the One Iranian student claimed the opposing faction was interested only in having "beer other than" political discussion." ALAIDWANI the new president, has said the club would take "the middle act of action between formal club leaders and club club leaders have their doubts. Ronnie Sookhoo, Trinidad graduate student and past club president, said new officers were incapable of carrying out a nonpartisan administration. Sookhoo said the five new officers were more campaign/ against the general American attitude toward other countries." The amendments, passed in Decem- ber 2013, allow the representative of each national club to be seated in the Inte- rional Club Executive commit- SOOKHOO CONTESTED the victory of an Iranian student on grounds of discrepancies in voting and vote counting. A number of students resulted in another election, which Sookhoo won by a two-thirds majority. Student Court action initiated by the students was never followed up and Sookhoo retained the presidency. The origins of the conflicts within the International Club closely involve Sookkoo, who ran for president in 1971. THE AMENDMENTS studied during this representation had to submit a copy of its constitution and be recognized by the international Sookoha said many clubs were reluctant to become involved with the International Club, and the American representatives of separate national clubs begin to attend executive committee meetings on behalf of the club, that rather than lose their interest, he allowed informal representation of various groups without the required paperwork. The status of the informal representatives played a part in the elections of officers who she told that the vice president of the club, a Pakistani, had accepted 40 new members, mostly Arabs before the elections without turning the membership fees over to the treasurer, but the directive directly into the club's treasury. WITHOUT CALLING the election meeting to order, Sookhoo said, he explained to the group that the new members had been elected as a constitutional requirement of six week's membership before gaining the right to vote. Sookhoo then called an executive committee and representatives of national organizations who had not been the general membership, including the 40 new members, voted to impeach him. Sookoho claimed he had never called the meeting to order and therefore the group had no right to impeach him. formally added to the committee members favored the new members. "In order to do what I thought was right," Sookhoo said, he accepted only the votes of the 20 members, but which denied voting rights to the new members. Alawdani maintains he was one of 20 members who had held cards for voting, but were not allowed to vote. SOOKHOO finally agreed to step down if the vice president would do the same and turn the elections over to the dean of foreign students and the club's advisor. When Sookhoo announced the committee's findings to the club. formally added to the committee German Summer Study To Be Meeting Topic The nine week institute, which will be sponsored by the KU Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures. Lawrence Kittsing, of An informational meeting for the German summer school, the annual German Summer Language Institute in Holzkirchen, Bavaria will be held at 8:30 am Sunday, June 14. German, will conduct the meeting. Open lectures and films on German music, art and pop culture. From 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in the Free Lab Copies of the lecture schedule may be obtained from the department office in 110 Carruth-0 Leary. Campus Bulletin One-day workshops are held in the state to provide information on the use of small group techniques and organization. IPA projects with federal funds. Locally it is involved with the methodology on better techniques for community goal setting. Lawrence is being used as a model city. In addition to regularly providing training programs especially tailored for particular organizations or a contractual CATV Discovers Varied Uses "Goals for Lawrence Project." Staff members are working with the City Council and interested citizens in an effort to develop a A seminar to study the applications of cable television to the purchase of planned, according to Doug Meng, assistant director of the Television Bureau. IPA, a division of Continuing Education, is trying to apply research techniques to problem-solving in community organizations. The division, the group, an information agency, realizes helps run scheduled seminars and conferences on campus. Cable television reaches beyond the realm of entitlement and accessibility said. Cable television hookups can be used for reading water meters, monitoring traffic and sending a panic button for the elderly. Gay Liberation: 7:30 p.m., Pine Room. Students for McGovern: 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room. Education Administration: 11:30 a.m. Alice, A. Rowe, Speech and Drama Exec. Council: 11:30 a.m. Speech and Drama Table: 11:30 a.m. Meadowland Russian Table: 11:30 a.m. Honor Scholarships Committee: noon. Honor Scholarships Committee: 11:30 p.m. Pine Room. September Honor Room. Committee: 11:30 p.m. Pine Classroom. Paris College: 6 p.m. 10:30 malt. AF to College Assembly: 6 p.m. AF to College Assembly: 6 p.m. Gay Liberation: 11:30 p.m. Pine Room. Those Fabulous Sixties Relive with us the fun-filled days of that dizzy decade: the zany assassinations, the kool-y cult murders, the colorful race riots, the amusing repressions, the meaningless drug trafficking, the violence and the pointless pop culture. All of it in the October issue of the National Lampoon, at your local newsstand. The University Council voted Thursday to use a mail ballot upon request of one-third of the voting University Senate members. It was stated in the vote that the mail ballot would be used when one-third of the voting Council members requested it. Correction Senior Blast-Off Party Friday, October 29 8-12 p.m. RED DOG INN FREE BEER MUSIC By Cargoe FREE to Senior Class Card Holders ($2.00 for non-members) Class cards on sale at the door WANTED ATHLETES FOOT Dr. Schwegler, director of the Student Health Service, has initiated a study to determine the effectiveness of differing treatments on athletes foot. He is studying three different treatments, medicated cream, base cream, soap and water. The study will last for six weeks, with each patient visiting a physician at the end of 2 weeks and 6 weeks. Dr. Schwegler feels that sixth persons with active cases of athlete foot are needed in order to validate any of the procedures. Any person with athlete foot who would like to participate in the study is encouraged to contact the Student Health Service at Watkins Hospital. All thirteen doctors at Watkins Hospital are participating in the study. ALL MEDICATION WILL BE PAID FOR, AND ALL SUBJECTS WHO COMPLETE THE STUDY WILL BE PAID FOR THEIR COOPERATION. If further information is desired, contact any physician at Watkins Hospital or Bruce Bove 542-384.