Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 20, 1960 TEKE's Recreate Rome for Party One of the oldest campus social events is being held this week end, the Tau Kappa Epsilon Roman Party. Senators and gladiators will be seen trooping about the campus Saturday in what is hailed as one of the most colorful events of the year. THE PSEUDO-ROMANS are often the target of various cat calls. "You too Brutus," and "Hail Caesar," are the most frequent. However some antagonists are original and pipe up with little gems such as: "The only Roman thing you look like, is a Roman candle," or "You look more like a Roman numeral than anything," or "Are or "You look more like a Roman numeral than anything," or "Are your hands Roman, too?" But the taunts roll off the citizen's back. He has his thoughts of the banquet and the dungeon to sustain him against the attacks. The banquet is one of the evening highlights. Raw chicken, ten-day-old bread, and warm slave's blood are a few of the delicacies served to the Romans as they recline on the mattress covered floor with their dates and eat. Following the dinner the Romans engage in such sports as grape peeling, lion feeding and intimacia. THE DANCING slave girls, which were captured in a raid on barbaric northern tribes, have also been added to the list of the evening events. After the slaves' dance, the girls will be auctioned off. Later in the evening, tours will be conducted through what magic has changed from a recreation room to an ancient dungeon. Of all of the torturing devices in the dungeon, the one most used during the Roman Party is the mattress. In fact the dungeon becomes one of the most popular hang-outs as the evening progresses. The senators believe that when in Rome do as the Roman. And wasn't one of the favorite pastimes of the Romans the orgy? Around the Campus Players to Give Anderson Play Robert Anderson's "Tea and Sympathy" will be staged by the University Players next week. Performances will be give at 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday in the Experimental Theatre. A multi-level set will be used. The all-student production deals with youth and problems of relationship that young persons face. The play's director, Sidney Berger, said that the actors easily identify with their roles, since "most students, whether they admit it or not, face similar problems." Berger is a graduate student and assistant instructor of speech. Produced on Broadway in 1953, the play had a year's run. Since then stock companies have revived it and a motion picture version has been made. The cast follows: Laura, Barbara Ann Runge, Higginsville, Mo., senior; Lilly, Linda Eberly, Olathe sophomore; Tom, Robert Moberly, Excelser Springs, Mo., senior; David, Francis Cullinan, Springfield, Mass., graduate student. Ralph, Stephen Booser, Kansas City junior; Al, Terry Kovac, Wichita sophomore; Steve, Thomas Woodard, Des Moines, Iowa freshman; Bill, Ronnie Trent, Okla., graduate student. Phil, Gary Powers, Savannah Mo., freshman; Paul, Daniel Kocher, Topeka sophomore, and Herb, Darryl Patten, Hitchcock, S. D., graduate student. McNown to N.Y. John S. McNown, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, is in New York attending a Symposium on Basic Science in France and the United States. Smith to Speak Sunday Carlyle H. Smith, professor or silversmithing, will speak at the Faculty Club at 5 p.m. on Sunday, October 23. The topic of the talk will be "Vacationing with the Navajos," and will concern his visit to Lukachakau, Arizona, one of the most primitive areas on the Navajo reservation. Scholarships Open For Faculty Study Any faculty member below the rank of associate professor may apply for one of six Elizabeth M. Watkins faculty scholarships of $900 for next summer. Applications are due by Nov. 15 and should be submitted to A. Byron Leonard, chairman of the scholarship committee, in 111 Snow Hall. F. Sherwood Rowland, associate professor of chemistry, is enroute to Prague, Czechoslovakia, to present two papers to the International Conference on Chemical Effects of Nuclear Transformations. Rowland Plans Trip To Czechoslovakia Prof. Rowland, known internationally for his work in originating recoil reactions of tritium and stimulating the use of tritium labeling in the field of radio-chemistry, will be one of 20 Americans among the 150 chemists from both sides of the Iron Curtain at the conference. The National Security Agency, the intelligence agency of the Defense Department, will administer its tests Dec. 3. Applications must be in by November, but no definite date has been set. Political science majors in international relations will be taking tests December 3 and 10. Foreign Service Tests Scheduled The Foreign Service examination will be given in Kansas City Dec. 10. Also administered at that time is the U.S. Information Agency examination. Applications must be in to Clifford Ketzel, assistant professor of political science, by October 24. Orchestra Tickets On Sale Blanks for season tickets to the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra are available for students, faculty and administrative staff at all school offices and the Student Union information desk. Official Bulletin 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 and Paper to Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. I achieved my 70 years in the usual way, by sticking to a scheme of life that would kill anyone else.—Mark Twain KU Foreign Students are invited to spend a weekend in St. Joseph, Missouri on Nov. 4-6, 1960. They are to be there noon on Friday. No one is meeting and with families on day and until afternoon on Sunday. Students will have to provide their own transportation either by pooling automobiles or taking a bus. Contact the sec of the Dean of Students, 223 Strong Hall, by noon on this Saturday, Oct. 22. TODAY Fulbright-Foreign Study Applications due. 206, Fraser. Poetry Dr. Hour 4 p.m. Union Browsing Room Dr. Wm. D. Paden will read Ten- Baptist Student Union. Evening devotional period at 5 p.m., 1221 Oread, features a question and answer period with Earnest and the Sunday School Board at Nashville. **Sigma Xi** $-7.30 \mathrm{~m}$ p. Bailley Auditorium, New York, NY; **Sigma Delta** Engineering, will speak on 'Low Temperature Phase, Volumetric, and Transport Gaseous Materials at High Temperatures'. KU KSU Club. 7 p.m. Forum Room of Union. A color ski movie will be featured. TOMORROW Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Catholic Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th and Kentucky. Episcopal Morning Prayer and Holy Conferencefast follows. 6:45 a.m. Cornell University Chapel, Burton House Newman Club. 12:25 p.m. Parlor A Daily Rosary. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. 7:20 principles. Bible study and informa- tional discuss. International Club. 7:30 p.m. Kansai Revolution with speakers who were involved in the revolution. Those students may do so at the door. KU-Y. 8:30 p.m. KU-Y and Kansas Fairground Society: Folk Singing. Kansas Union SUNDAY Catholic Services, 8 and 10 a.m. Fraser Town Hall, 203 Church Street Social at Union following 10:00 Mast. UP Representatives Elected Fred Morrison, Colby senior, and Michael Thomas, Kirkwood, Mo. junior, were elected to the University Party general assembly in a district meeting last night. They will represent district seven, the unmarried-unorganized students. Women Play Big U.N. Role It was that the distaff increasingly is playing a major role in international relations. FEW OF THE WOMEN make speeches before the assembly. Mrs. Golda Meir, the foreign minister of Israel and the highest ranking official on the distaff side, is the one exception. Most of the women delegates work quietly through the various committees to which they are assigned. Biographies of the women indicate that their ability, more than their politics, is the major reason for their appointments. UNITED NATIONS — (UPI) — In all the recent din at the United Nations, one quiet fact went almost unnoticed. And most of them are on the assembly's third committee — the one handling the humanitarian, social and cultural affairs. Almost all have outstanding careers in the diplomatic, political or professional world. A check through the list of delegates and alternates to the 15th general assembly shows at least 40 women helping to represent major powers such as the United States, Britain and Russia, and the smaller nations like Israel, Costa Rica and Morocco. MRS. Z. V Mironova, the Soviet Union's deputy permanent representative to the United Nations, is a former mayor of Moscow. Mrs. Auto Wrecking New & Used Parts & Junk East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 Now, for a short time, your dealer will give you free of any extra cost - a handsome electric yardlight for your lawn or patio. It's a $32.50 value, but it's FREE when you buy either a modern electric range or clothes dryer. Comes complete with post, photocell, convenience outlet plug, and bulbs (installation not included). You'll eventually buy an electric dryer or range so why not now, when you can get this free yardlight! This offer applies to KPL customers only. Judith Imru is assistant secretary of state in Ethiopia. Mrs. Halima Anagay is Morocco's cultural attache to the United States and serves in Washington when the General Assembly is not in session. Lady Tweedsmuir, one of Britain's delegates, has been a conservative member of parliament for 15 years. AN INVESTOR-OWNED KANSAS COMPANY Pakistan's only woman representative at the United Nations is Begum Shireen Aziz Ahmed, who has served in several assemblies, and is the wife of her country's ambassador to Washington. Another ambassadorial wife is Mrs. Hazami Fekini, the first woman representative from Libya. Her husband is chief of the Libyan delegation and ambassador to the United States. Rites Held for Mrs. Spiegel WICHTIA — (UPI) — Private funeral services were held in Wichita yesterday for Mrs. Harriet Spiegel, wife of Dale Spiegel, Democratic candidate for Kansas attorney general. Mrs. Spiegel was killed last Saturday in an automobile accident on the Kansas Turnpike and her husband was injured. All experience is an arch to build upon—Henry Brooks Adams . Post-Grads are traditionally styled for those lithe, tapered lines you've always had a yen for! Smooth, pleatless front; pre-cuffed bottoms. At the smartest college shops; in a host of washable fabrics from $4.95 to $8.95.