Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, April 11. 1960 International Banquet Draws Over 400 Hungry Persons More than 400 students, faculty members and townspeople ate the foreign-style food served by costumed foreign students at the International Banquet Sunday. Guests' plates were filled with a variety of foods prepared by the members of the International Club. Main dishes from 13 countries were served, as well as entrees and desserts from the rest of the 25 Delta Sigma Phis Bail Out Mascot Lance, Delta Sigma Phi's collie mascot, is back at the fraternity's house after a night in the dog pound. Lance was one of the victims of Lawrence's ordinance which requires all dogs to be either penned or on a leash between April 1 and September 1. He was picked up Wednesday in the middle of his customary morning-truck-chasing session on the hill. Thursday afternoon Douglas Reed, Cassoday, and Kent McCall, North Kansas City, Mo., both sophomores, went down to "bail" the dog out. Lance was a free dog after they paid for a rabies shot, a license and one night's board at the dog pound. The bill was $8.50. Entertainment included mandolin music and songs from Ghana and ballads from China, Indonesia and India. countries represented. Fifty students cooked the food. When it was announced that students from the United States would perform a dance, the audience was puzzled. But the crowd murmured approval when Hawaiian dancers appeared. Relays Committee Processes Entries Special guests were 24 citizens of Burns, the "international country town." They invited KU foreign students into their homes last Thanksgiving. The KU Relays committee is busy processing entries for the annual two-day event to be held April 22-23. In other years the club has lost money on the banquet. Sheila Lemon, Birmingham, England, graduate student and vice president of the International Club, said the club made a profit on the banquet this year. Pilots Free to Eat Where They Please Committee members are working now, receiving teams and individual entries from universities throughout the country, as well as high school entries from Kansas and Missouri schools. The relays parade also is handled by the committee. NEW YORK — (UPI) — Trans World Airlines has accepted the recommendation of an arbitration panel that its pilots should be allowed to explore the eating places of Europe's capitals during flight ston-overs. New freshmen members of the committee are: Financially, that is! If you find yourself in a predicament where saving seems next to impossible, you'd be wise to get a head start on the future with a guaranteed savings plan-one with protection features, too! communicate are. Randolph G. Austin, Salina; Gene F. Gaines, Joplin, Mo.; Ronald G. Hinkle, Paola; Lovell S. Jarvis, Winfield; Kenneth R. Keeeler, Bartlesville, Okla.; Warren R. Keller, Prairie Village; Gerald G. Kepner, Wichita; Harvey C. Martin, Salina and Lauren S. Ward, Ottawa. Beginning your life insurance program now gives you the advantage of lower premiums. We'll be glad to talk with you about a variety of plans from which you can choose. Your plan can be tailored to your individual needs. BILL LYONS The Air Line Pilots Assn. ha complained the pilots presently couldn't eat at airline expense any-where but at their hotels. PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia SUPERVISOR 1722 W. Ninth, VI 3-5695 Radio Programs 4:30 Jazz Cocktail 5:00 Twilight Concert — "Trio in A Minor" by Tchaikovsky 7:00 Ballet Music: "The Wise Virgins" by Walton 7:30 Keyboard Concert — Harpsichord: featuring Wanda Landowska 7:55 News 8:05 Faculty Chamber Music Recital 9:15 Starlight Symphony: "Symphony No. 3 in E-Flat Major" by Beethoven 10:00 News 10:05 A Little Night Music: "Quartet in F Major" by Haydn 11:00 Spectacular Film KANU KUOK 4:00 The Bob Smith Show 6:00 Campus News 6:05 Route 63 7:00 News 7 7:05 Showtime USA 7:30 Spotlight on Sports 7:30 Penthouse Serenade 8:00 House of Jazz 9:00 News 9:05 Stardust 9:30 Golden Instrumentals 10:00 Campus News 10:05 Kenton Keith Show 11:00 News 12:07 Daily Devotions Campaign Against Narcotics NEW YORK — (UPI) — The New York City board of education yesterday declared a success its campaign to cut down the number of narcotics users among the city's high school students. The board said there were only 15 known or suspected addicts in a total registration of 414,000 students, the lowest such figure in five years. What do we live for if not to make the world less difficult for each other.—George Eliot Exhibit of Primitive Shelters Now on Display in the Union Students of Design IV constructed scale models of various primitive shelters as a class project. About 20 of the suitcase-sized models will be on display in the Kansas Union lobby and cafeteria for two weeks. They include dwellings made of bamboo, animal hides, poles, thatch, logs, stone and bark. Materials used in construction depend on the demands of the climate and building materials available in a given geographic area. The film, "Man of Aran," sponsored by the department of English, has its setting in the same Aran Islands used as a setting by John Millington Synge for his two plays, "Playboy of the Western World" and "Riders to the Sea." Army Developing Helicopter 'Man of Aran' Film Showing Wednesday A film will be shown at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Fraser Theater portraying the battle by fishermen and peasants against storms, barren soil and unexpected death on the Aran Islands off the northwest coast of Scotland. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Army said yesterday it will develop a turbine-powered helicopter for target spotting and reconnaissance. The turbine copter, scheduled for testing in 1963, will replace two types of helicopters and a light plane presently in use. Another model, a Crow Indian teepee, is pure white when it is new. Bucksin streamers hang from the tops of the 14 frame poles. If the full-scale teepee were set up and taken down frequently, the 12 to 14 hides had to be replaced once a year. MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) — The last of 3,200 brewery workers ended a week-long strike today after the Schlitz brewery gave in to a union demand that stacks of beer cases be piled six high instead of seven high for safety. Union Wins Stacking Stand One model, built of bamboo, poles and thatch, was modeled after a bronze engraving of the first century. Want a TGIF Sweatshirt? Only $3.00 Call VI 3-0138 NEW DUAL FILTER Tareyton Product of The American Relaxe-Company