Page 3 Around the Campus Program Set At KU, Bonn An official graduate exchange program between KU and the University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany, has been announced by J. H. Nelson, dean of the graduate school. Under the agreement with the Rheinische - Friedrich - Wilhelms-University, a graduate student or graduating senior will be able to study in Bonn during the academic year 1961-62 while a German graduate student will attend KU. The stipend consists of a cash award to cover room and board plus remission of the tuition fees. The candidate will be selected by the University of Bonn before April 15 Applications must be in by March 1. Former Governor To Speak at Lewis Alfred M. Landon, former governor of Kansas and presidential candidate against Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936, will give a short speech at the Lewis Hall dedication dinner at 6 p.m. tomorrow. Luther N. Lewis gave the bequest which made the construction of Lewis Hall possible. The hall is a memorial to his father and mother, Alexander and Mary Francis North Lewis. Clark Coan, assistant dean of men, will introduce members and friends of the Lewis family. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will introduce Mr. Landon. Education Methods Pioneer to Speak Waldo Sweet, pioneer of new methods in teaching foreign languages, will give two lectures Wednesday at Fraser Theater. The professor of classical studies at the University of Michigan will speak at 4 p.m. on "Construction of Learning Materials for Foreign Languages." At 7:30 p.m. he will discuss "Testing Achievement in Foreign Languages." Both the University and the Law- rence Public Schools are using techniques for teaching beginning Latin developed by Mr. Sweet. Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 231 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to school. Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin Foreign Students: Please turn in the Rotary Club nomination ballots to the Foreign Student Adviser by 5 p.m. tomorrow. NSA Committee. 4 p.m. Kansas Union. Baptist Student Union. 1221 Oread. Baptist School. 5 p.m. Kansas Union. Engineerettes. Watkins Room, Kansas Union, 8 p.m. Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. Episcopal Morning Prayer and Holy Communion. Breakfast follows 6:45 a.m. and ends at 9:30 a.m. Baptist Student Union. 1221 Oread. 12:30, Devotional period. Geology Department. Dr. Charles Nevin will present a 2-part lecture on "Sorting, Grading and Bedding of Sediments." The 1st part will be given at at the San Diego Union, Student Union. The 2nd part in Room 426, Lindley Hall at 3:45 p.m. Angel Flight Meeting. Military Science Bldg. 7 p.m. Naval Reserve Research Co. Room 104, Military Science Bldg. The New University of Kansas Reactor. 2D LT. L. CUNNIGHAM, USAR. 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY Jay Jones. Room 306, Kansas Union 5 p.m. Tom Rea Article Appears In Encore Magazine The Kansas Community Theater Plan is the subject of the principal feature article in the first issue of Encore, a new magazine devoted to community and little theaters and to school and religious drama. Tom P. Rea, instructor of speech and director of the Kansas Community Theater Plan, is the author of the article. A series of experimental workshop plays will be presented today, tomorrow, Wednesday and Friday in the Experimental Theatre. Experimental Plays Set for This Week Two 15-minute plays will be presented today, starting at 4:00 p.m. There will be a 15-minute discussion period after each play. Monday, Jan. 16, 1961 University Daily Kansan Tomorrow, Wednesday and Friday the plays will begin at 3:00 p.m. Students graduating this spring from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences should consider teaching opportunities in private schools. This is the opinion of Mary Abell Watson, director of the Cooperative Bureau for Teachers, a non-profit recruitment and placement agency. College Graduates To Private Schools She said, "Many livalal arts students do not realize that it is possible to obtain teaching positions without a degree in education. Independent schools prefer teachers with a thorough liberal arts background to those who have specialized in methods courses." MISS $ ^{W} $ WATSON said this does not mean there is not a need for teachers with training in education. She said it indicates, however, that students who have not taken education courses can find interesting and rewarding positions in the teaching profession. "Private school positions offer the young man or woman who wishes to devote his life to the teaching profession a pleasant and gracious way of service in an attractive and interesting environment," Miss Watson said. Students interested in further information regarding job opportunities should write the Cooperative Bureau for Teachers, 22 East 42 Street, New York 17, N. Y. John M. Reiff Gets Maytag Scholarship John M. Reiff, Wichita senior, is one of 10 engineering and commerce students at eight midwest universities who has been awarded special scholarships by the Maytag Co. Foundation, Inc. Each of the scholarships amounts to $200. Those receiving the grants are selected by college faculties. A full schedule of Greek Week activities is being mapped out according to Paul Ingemanson, Topeka senior, who is Interfraternity Council co-chairman for the event Greek Week Plans Made Greek Week will be March 19-25 "It is a week of Greek activity having a three fold purpose." Ingemanson said. "They are to encourage friendly competition among the Greek houses, to enable Greeks to become better acquainted and better appreciate what they have in common and to do some project as a unit." Ingemanson said that the Greek Week project has not been selected. The schedule and committees appointed free Greek Week events. - Sunday, March 19) Queen judging. Interfraternity and Panhellenic council co-chairmen are Roger Schmanke, Ottawa sophomore and Janis Tomlinson, Prairie Village sophomore. The schedule and committees appointed for Greek Week events are: ● Wednesday, Scholarship Banquet. Co-chairmen are Gene Lee, Wichita sophomore and Elaine V. Benson, Mission sophomore. - Tuesday, Exchange Dinner. Cochairmen are Dick Peil, Atchison junior and Shelia Ryan, Aurora, Mo. junior. ● Thursday, Interfaternity Sing. Carl Martinson, Dew Soto sophomore and Toni Delmonico, Wichita sophomore are co-chairman. Ingemanson said there will be a speaker for the Scholarship Banquet. He said that there is also a possibility of having a concert on one of the open nights of the week. Gail Goodman, Shawnee Mission senior is the Penhellenic co-chairman for Greek Week. - Saturday, Chariot Race. Harvey Martin, Salina sophomore is chairman. "Our plans are not yet complete." Ingemanson said. "Final plans will be made a few weeks after the start of the second semester." Members of the Kansas State registration and examining board of architects met Friday with members of the KU architectural department to prepare for the professional examinations for architects. The examinations will be given Jan. 25 through 28 at Marvin Hall. Fifty-six candidates are eligible for registration in Kansas. Officials Plan for State Architectural Exam Never open on less than 14 points. -S. Levine Russian Flying Object-Hit or Miss? WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Russians shot an object into the air, it fell — or flew — we know not where. The Defense Department says there has been no trace of the missilelike object since it was detected flying out of Russia and heading toward the Pacific Friday night. The object was tracked for six minutes by a U. S. Air Force radar station at Shemya Island, Alaska. A department spokesman said yesterday there had been no further radar or visual sightings of the object which might have been an attempt to launch a satellite or send a rocket into the Soviet Pacific testing zone. The Navy last week spotted three Soviet missile-tracking ships heading toward the testing grounds, about 1,000 miles from Hawaii. Card-Carrying Members Only WOLVERHAMPTON, England — (UPI) The local engineers union announced yesterday it will buy a $280 piece of sculpture but only paid-up union members will be permitted to see it. SPACE TECHNOLOGY LABORATORIES INVITES Mathematicians & Physical Scientists TO DISCUSS CAREERS IN Scientific Computer Programming WITH STL REPRESENTATIVES, ON-CAMPUS JAN.17,1961 Challenging new problems in the areas of aerodynamics, celestial mechanics, tracking and trajectory analysis, systems simulation, and test evaluation require individuals with more than the usual inclination toward, and qualifications in, computer-oriented mathematics. Space Technology Laboratories' Computation and Data Reduction Center, located in Southern California, is one of the nation's largest and most advanced computational facilities. Its staff members daily utilize two IBM 7090's and sophisticated data reduction systems to solve problems arising in the Air Force ballistic missile program and space flight studies. STL offers opportunity for: association with a superior technical staff headed by progressive management; participation in unusually challenging computation and data reduction problems; professional growth; and for advancement within a stimulating and creative environment. Arrange for an on-campus interview by contacting your placement office, or, address your resume to: College Relations, Space Technology Laboratories, Inc., PO. Box 95004, Los Angeles 45, California. SPACE TECHNOLOGY LABORATORIES, INC. a subsidiary of Thompson Ramo Wooldridge, Inc.