Page 3 Starlight Trips, Dances On Recreation Agenda Bus trips to the Starlight Theater, square dancing, outdoor movies playground facilities, swimming, intramurals and horseback riding all are on the summer session recreational program. Larry Heeb, assistant professor of physical education, announces that four trips to the Starlight are planned—June 18 to see "Oklahoma!" June 25 for "The Firefly." July 2 for "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes," and July 16 for "Say, Darling." Buses will leave Robinson Gymnasium at 6:30 p.m. Ticket prices are $2.25, including transportation and $1 general admission tickets, or $3.25, transportation and $2 reserved ticket. Regular swimming classes will be held at 2 and 3 p.m. daily at the university pool. For children of students and faculty, a playground has been set up in Fowler Grove, open five days a week until 9:30 p.m. Students will supervise play. Playground apparatus, shuffleboard, volleyball, aerial tennis, baddinton, horseshoes, croquet, box hockey and other games are available. Three square dances also are scheduled for the union on Monday, June 15; Monday, June 29, and Monday, July 13. A half-hour instruction period will be held from 7:30 to 8 p.m. each day, followed by dancing from 8 to 9:30 p.m. Six hour-dances will be held, from 8 to 9 p.m. on June 10, June 17, June 24, July 1, July 5 and July 8 in the Kansas Union. Dress will be informal. Horseback riding instruction is offered at the stables of Gayle Mott southeast of Lawrence, at 7 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Cost is $1.25 a lesson. The Lawrence Country Club offers a summer session membership of $35 for those interested in golf. On the campus there are 17 tennis courts, with a variety of surfaces. Softball fields are south of the campus. Intramural and outdoor movie information may be found elsewhere in this issue. Summer Session Kansan Fellowship Group Will Meet Sunday The United Christian Campus Fellowship, an ecumenical group, will hold its first meeting of the summer session Sunday evening. The Westminster Fellowship, Roger Williams Fellowship, Evangelical United Brethren, and Disciples Student Fellowship, campus religious organizations, will be included in the weekly meetings. The Rev. M. C. Allen of the First Baptist Church will speak Sunday on "Modern Religious Drama." The theme of the UCCF is "The Next Big Step," which deals with the individual and his world perspective. The meetings, to be held at Westminster Hall, 1221 Oread, will begin with a supper at 5:30. William Kane, Stafford senior, is chairman of the fellowship. Anatomy Professor Goes to Smithsonian Nicholas Hotton III, assistant professor of anatomy, is leaving to accept the paleontological curatorship of reptiles at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., the official museum of the U.S. government. Dr. Hotton, who will begin his ned duties in June, has been a member of the KU faculty since 1951. As curator of fossil reptiles at the Smithsonian he will be returning to the field of vertebrate paleontology in which his graduate study was made. The Kansas Savings and Loan League is sponsoring its first annual seminar for high school teachers of business and economics subjects and social sciences through June 13 at the University. Savings League Holding Seminar The purpose of the seminar is to enable high school teachers of these subjects to become more familiar with our financial institutions and money and banking system, Dr. Leland J. Pritchard said. Dr. Pritchard, chairman of the KU economics department, will be director and instructor of the seminar. About 20 teachers will attend through sponsorship of their local savings and loan associations, the Kansas Savings and Loan League and the United States Savings and Loan League. The sponsoring organizations will defray all expenses except travel. The teachers will be housed in Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. Guest instructors will be J. Hugo Nelson, vice president, Capitol Federal Savings and Loan Assn., Topea; Don Geyer, U.S. Savings and Loan League, Chicago; Robert Lake, president, Western Savings and Loan Assn., Pratt, and James McBride, president, and Charles Darche, vice president-treasurer, Federal Home Loan Bank of Topea. LEONARD'S STANDARD GAS J-School Names Honor Roll Six seniors and two juniors were named today by Dean Burton W. Marvin to the Spring Semester scholastic honor roll of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. They comprise the top 10 per cent in grade point averages of the students enrolled in the school. Juniors are Paul B. Lewellyn, Hutchinson and Newell Korff Maag of Pratt. GAS INTOWN Seniors listed are Mary Alice Alden, Hutchinson; Clydene Boots Brown, Isabel; Robert C. Harwi Lawrence; Harry O. Ritter, Lawrence; Ramona R. Rush, Little River, and Patricia M. Swanson, Newton Three films will be shown at 8 tonight east of Robinson Gymnasium. The movies will run about an hour. 3 Outdoor Movies To Be Run Tonight The Above Is A Lot of BULL They are "Okefenokee Interlude," "West to the Tetons," and "Tight Lines." The outdoor movies are a part of the recreational program. The typical county chairman for both Democratic and Republican parties in Kansas is 50 years old, has served for four years, and for most of his adult life has lived in the county which he serves, reports the Governmental Research Center at KU. Typical Chairman Is 50 Four-Year Party Vet The characteristics of county chairmen and vice-chairmen in Kansas were investigated by about 100 college students working under the leadership of the Kansas Citizenship Clearing House. Seventeen Kansas colleges cooperated in the study. The students interviewed 272 persons, including Republican and Democratic chairmen and vice-chairmen. Those interviewed represented about two-thirds of the chairman. Among the characteristics studied were educational, occupational, religion, motivation for going into politics, and paths by which individuals rise to the position of chairman. One of the objectives of the Kansas Citizenship Clearing House is to encourage young men and women to go into politics in the party of their choice. Two-thirds of the chairmen For The Young Man Swim Trunks Knit Shirts Sand Lumbers $2.99 to $12.95 $4.99 $1.99 to $3.95 Walking Shorts $3.95 to $5.95 ROBERT EDMISTON STORES, INC. 845 Mass. said they regarded their jobs as a civic duty or obligation, and "civic duty" was given most often as the reason why a young person should go into politics. Only a small number suggested that young people go into politics for the value it would have to their own careers. 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