Page 3 Around the Campus K.U. Skiers Plan Colorado Junket Fifty-five KU students who have never been on skis before will be among the 88 members of Skiers Limited spending their betweensemesters vacation in Winter Park, Colo. Skiers Limited is a University-recognized club sponsored by Larry Marshall, Salina junior, and Alan Morris, Caney senior. The skiers will leave by bus from the Kappa Alpha Theta house at 3 p.m. Jan.24 and will return Jan. 28. One evening of the trip will be spent sleighing, Marshall said. The $78 fee for the trip includes room, meals, transportation, skis, tow tickets, insurance and instruction. The group will stay at Idle Wild Inn and Lodge, 68 miles west of Denver. Instructors for the tour will be Franz Ettlin, Kerns, Switzerland and Hubert Neiss, Vienna, Austria Both are graduate students. Western Civ Review In Bailey Tomorrow Two review sessions for the Western Civilization course will be held at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday in Bailey Auditorium. The final examination will be given from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday. Testing places were assigned to the students when they registered. Students are asked to bring only I.D. cards and pen and ink to the examination rooms. Murrow Interviews Oppenheimer in Film A film will be shown at 4 p.m. tomorrow in 3 Bailey featuring Edward R. Murrow in an interview with Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, nuclear physicist and director of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton. N. J. Dr. Oppenheimer gives his views on nuclear warfare and the future of scientific inquiry. He also describes the function of the Institute and the work of its scholars. University Daily Kansan Student Payroll Out Tomorrow Student payroll checks for December should be available tomorrow at the cashier windows, Charles Harkness, director of the personnel office, said today. W-2 tax withholding forms for hourly student employees will be distributed with the January checks about Feb. 2, he added. Supervisors of student hourly employees are asked to have time cards turned in to the personnel office by tomorrow noon. The International Club will close its program for the semester with a dinner at 6 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. International Club To Give Dinner At 5 p.m. club members will meet in the Pine Room of the Union to elect officers for the spring semester. After the dinner the Arab students will present a program. A group picture will be taken and a surprise award for the best "night of nations" this semester will be presented. Tickets for the dinner can be purchased at the Union for $1.50. Woman Wills $35,000 For Scholarship Fund The proceeds from an El Dorado woman's $25,000 estate will be used to establish the Sarah D. Knox Scholarship Fund at KU. Mrs. Knox, who died Dec. 26, bequeathed her entire estate to the KU Endowment Assn. for the scholarship fund. The grant will provide scholarships each year for at least two students, possibly more. The will stipulates that preference be given students from Butler County. Discouraged? Look Ahead Students discouraged with what is left of this semester can begin looking forward to classes they will take in the spring. A schedule of classes is available now in the registrar's office, 122 Strong. Students wishing to transfer to another school of the University next semester should also report to that office as soon as possible so that transfer papers can be prepared before enrollment. James K. Hitt, registrar, said that the enrollment procedure will be similar to that followed last semester. There will be no early enrollment permits "except in severe hardship cases," he said. Students with particular working hours should submit letters from their employers and an application to the Committee on Special Enrollment Privileges. Mr. Hitt is chairman of that committee. Students will be authorized to schedule classes around their work schedule but they will not be given permits to enroll early, Mr. Hitt said. All students will be required to schedule a substantial number of their classes in the afternoon or Saturday morning. Therefore, there is no direct relationship between the time a student enrolls and the class schedule he obtains, he added. Students who cannot enroll at their scheduled time should make special application with the enrollment committee. Enrollment will be completed about noon, Saturday Jan. 31. The last group to enroll will enter the Union at 10:30 a.m. Statewide Activities Forms Texans Club Statewide Activities is organizing a club for Texans attending KU. The group will be an informal club for Lone Star Staters who want to get together with their fellow Texans. Anyone interested should call Dee Morsbach, VI 3-4610. Tuesday. Jan. 6, 1959 The First Shall Be Last On Income Tax Returns Students may be subordinate to faculty members in the classroom but during vacation the rank and status system doesn't necessarily hold. Just ask Kenneth Gray, Lawrence junior, who pulled family rank on a faculty member in the Lawrence Memorial Hospital waiting room between Dec. 31 and Jan. 1. Both Gray and Capt. Donald L. Hunter, instructor of air science, became fathers of daughters for the first time. But a 2-year-old son, plus 29 hours and 23 minutes, gave the junior seniority over the instructor. Shari Lee Hunter, her parent's first child, was the last child born at the Lawrence hospital in 1958. Catherine Marie Gray was the first Lawrence baby of 1959. Capt. Hunter is ready to pull his rank when he files his income tax return. He can claim his new daughter as a deduction for 1958, while Gray will have to wait until next year to get his deduction. PAT READ INDIAN TRADER 445 Tenn. 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