Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 9, 1959 Ike's Budget Will Pinch Housing Plans, Wilson Says President Eisenhower's 1960 budget, which would nearly eliminate college housing loans, was attacked by J. J. Wilson, KU director of dormitories. "If the President's recommendations in the 1960 budget pass, college housing loans will be more difficult to obtain, and the interest will be higher." Mr. Wilson said. The budget recommends major changes in the college housing program. Public institutions would be made inelegible for federal loans. Mr. Wilson said that federal loans were used for Stouffer Place married students' apartments, Joseph R. Pearson dormitory, Lewis Hall and Templ'in Hall. KU has borrowed about six and one-half million dollars in federal loans over the past four years, Mr. Wilson said. The Kansas Union was mainly financed by federal loans, too. The American Council on Education said in a recent bulletin that it deplored the recommendations in President Eisenhower's budget message which, for all practical purposes, would terminate expansion of the College Housing Loan Program on June 30 of this year. Anderson to Go to N. J. Two KU faculty members will appear on the program of the American Educational Research Assn. meeting beginning Saturday in Atlantic City, N.J. Dean Kerneth E. Anderson of the School of Education, AERA vice president, will serve as chairman of a symposium on the education of teachers of science and mathematics and the improvement of those programs in U.S. schools. Dr. Herbert A. Smith, professor of education now on leave with the U.S. Office of Education, will be one of the six panelists in the symposium headed by Dean Anderson. Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A 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 Dr. Smith is chief of the science, mathematics and foreign language section for aid to local schools under the National Defense Education Act. Official Bulletin Ph.D. French Rending Exam, 9 a.m. DeCenter in Fraser B by 3:40 p.m. DecCenter in Fraser B by 3:40 p.m. By action of the AWS Board of Standards all those women students attending the basketball game at Manhattan basketball have extended hours until the buses return. TODAY Business Placement Bureau Interviews. Mr. H. W. Holtz, Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., Sales Team, Fred Nordstrom, trainees, trainees, production trainers, and feed sales. Teachers Appointment Bureau. Intervie- sion with Kenneth Mitchel, Sarah Annu, Calif. Math Club, 4 p.m. 3 strong. Speaker Festival, "Some Sums." Every Invitation. Karl Shapiro, poet (Pulitzer Prize winner in poetry-1945), will give a University Lecture, open to the public 4-5 and the community atrium. "The Critic in Suite of Himself." Baptist Student Union, 5 p.m., Danforth College "Church Loyalty" by Belva Dauber. Kansas Society of the Archaeological First Metal Users of the Western Hemisphere" by Dr. James B. Giffin, Director 730 p.m. on Tuesday, November 16 in the Union Pine Room. Teachers Appointment Bureau interviews, 117 Bailey Hall. Come in and make an appointment. Clyde C. Miller, St. Louis, Mo. TOMORROW Business Placement Bureau. Interviews. 214 Strong Hall, Mr. Fred Nordstrom, Corgil Inc., Mgmt. trainees, production trainees, and fee sales. Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m. breakfast following, Canterbury House. Newman Club Mass, 6:30 a.m. at St. Jrhs, Chureh, 11th and Kentucky. The state Board of Regents has authorized the drawing of preliminary plans for the addition. Baptist Student Union, 12:30 p.m. Dan- ford Chapel. Rev. Vincent Riggs, pastor of Antioch Baptist Church, will speak on the book of Philippians. William Allen White Day. There will be a noon luncheon at the Union and Ben Hilbs will speak. Tickets may be obeyed Mrs. Smith in the Journalism Office. "Of course the whole problem of budget balancing is a tough one and a political one too," Mr. Wilson said. Frank R. Burge, Kansas Union director, said the planned addition to the Kansas Union is being financed mostly by a federal government loan of $900,000. Das Faschingsfest wird belim Deutschen Verein in Dienstag um 8 Uhr in Raum 11. Fraser gefeiert. Fasching ist das ducere "Mardi Gras." Tragen Sie Kostueme, wenn Sie wollen—aber das ist nicht noetig. Komme Sie die doch alle; wir werden Spass haben. Es wird Spiele, Taenze, und Erfrischungen geben. "The financing through the federal program has been very helpful to institutions in permitting them to build and expand student housing, dining and related facilities," Mr. Burge said. MANHATTAN - The almost-new Student Union building at Kansas State College, less than three years old, is already overcrowded. The director of the Union said that the major needs are for more food service area, meeting rooms and storage space. The building originally cost $1,650,000. "It seems to me that it also reassures private lenders that college dormitories, unions, and related facilities are appropriate fields for debt financing," he said. "The availability of long-term federal credit has been accompanied by a willingness on the part of many private financial houses to extend long-term credit themselves." K-State Union Will Grow with the sale of commercial open market bonds. Expansion would be difficult without federal aid, he said. He also said that KU was fortunate to have acquired the federal loan at a low interest rate, coupled The anticipated returns from the student fees in 1962 would be adequate to finance a $750,000 addition. 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