Page 3 Summer Job As Park Ranger Is Welcome One For Coach A boyhood admiration of forest rangers which grew from a close association with them near his home in the San Luis valley in Colorado, has resulted in 27 summers as a park ranger in Yellowstone National Political Teaching Problems A Topic The Kansas Assn. of Teachers of Government will hold its annual meeting at Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia, Friday and Saturday to discuss problems in teaching politics and government. Ethan P. Allen, professor of political science, is chairman of the association, which will have three political science teachers serving on panel discussions. E. O. Stene, professor, and William J. Gore, assistant professor, will be on a panel discussing "Internship as a Teaching Device." Rhoten A. Smith, assistant professor, is chairman of a panel on "Collection and Analysis of Election Data." Clarence Rupp, director of information for the Kansas Farm Bureau, will speak at a banquet the first night on "Legislative Activities of Farm Bureaus" KU Grad Will Teach In Austria Mrs. Hazel Brown Williams, a 1927 graduate is the first Negro professor to receive a Fulbright appointment to teach in Vienna, Austria. She has been the subject of several pictures and articles in Austrian newspapers. Stars and Stripes, an American armed forces newspaper, featured a story about her work as an English teacher in a girl's school. After receiving a master's degree from the university in 1929, she was awarded a traveling scholarship and studied for a year in Germany. Later she received a Ph. D. degree from New York University. Recently she taught in a Kentucky college During the Hungarian uprising, Mrs. Williams and her students helped with the refugee program by working in refugee centers and collecting clothing and food for displaced people. Educational Council Will Hear Anderson Dean Kenneth E. Anderson of the School of Education will be guest speaker at a dinner in the Student Union Ballroom April 4 in celebration of the 100th anniversary of the National Education Assn. The dinner is sponsored by the Lawrence Educational Council. Dean Anderson will speak on "Educational Vectors for the Future." A feature of the celebration will be the birthday cake, 12-feet in diameter. One hundred honor seniors from Douglas County high schools will light the 100 candles on the cake, symbolizing the next century. Anderson To Attend Education Meeting Dean Kenneth E. Anderson of the School of Education will serve on two committees at the annual meeting of the North Central Assn, for Colleges and Secondary Schools Sunday through Tuesday. He will meet with the committee on secondary schools to be dropped from the association and the committee on second year graduate work for teacher education. Secretarial Workshop April 6 The second annual Secretarial Workshop will be held April 6 at the University. A panel discussion on the topic "You Get Things Done Through People" will be moderated by Max Stalcup, coordinator-instructor of office training, Lawrence High School. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2968 Park for Wayne (Rep) Replogle, KU freshman football coach. As one of only five "park naturalists, senior grade" in the park, Mr. Replogle doesn't plan to quit the park service until he retires in 1975. He is a member of the corps of 100 park rangers and 30 park ranger naturalists which supplement the year-round ranger staff in the park every summer. "I guess it's a combination of the old American pioneer spirit present in all of us, and the great feeling of freedom I experience in the park, that takes me back every summer," Mr. Replogle said. "The contrast provided by the job in Yellowstone to the sometimes hectic business of football is a welcome one," he said. "After three months of roughing it in Yellowstone, I'm glad to get back to football. Then after football, the park is a relief." WAYNE (REP) REPLOGLE) Mr. Replogle has worked in every section of the park, but his present location is in the canyon area where he has spent 14 summers. This is the spot where the Yellowstone River flows through Yellowstone Canyon. Football, Park Are Contrast His duties include showing tourists the main points of interest in the canyon, conducting tours into the gorge and through nearby forested areas and giving evening lectures about the park to overnight guests. He often talks with from 4,000 to 6,000 persons daily. Conducts Canyon Tours The coach's present project is to photograph the canyon and collect rock specimens from its walls. The specimens and the pictures will be displayed in a new museum to be built in the park next year. In 1948 Mr. Replegle began collecting information for his book "Yellowstone's Bannock Indian Trails," which was published last year. U. S. churches, synagogues and temples have property and endowments of an estimated value of 12 billion dollars. Three faculty members of the School of Business have been invited to take part in three selective programs financed by the Ford Foundation grants. Max E. Fessler, associate professor of business administration, is one of 30 members chosen for a faculty seminar in new developments in business administration Aug. 5-31. The Graduate School of Industrial Administration of the Carnegie Institute of Technology will conduct the seminar at Williams College, Williamstown, Mass. 3 Business Men To Seminars Each member of the American Assn. of Collegiate Schools of Business could nominate two faculty members for the seminar for a total of 160 nominees, Charles B. Saunders Jr., assistant professor of business administration, will be one of 14 teachers to attend the Summer Case Seminar Program of the Harvard Graduate School of Business. He will take part in an 8-week course on the use of the case method in teaching business courses and procedures for gathering case materials. Wiley S. Mitchell, associate professor of business administration, has been invited to join the faculty of Northwestern University School of Business this summer for a 15-month period. During this time he will act as consultant for the development and teaching of courses in quantitative control, involving accounting and statistics. The work is to be done in connection with a Ford Foundation grant. Prof. Mitchell has not decided yet if he will apply for a leave of absence from KU to accept the position. Business Group Picks Gov. Docking Gov. George Docking and seven University students have been elected to membership in the KU chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary society for Business School students. The governor, who is president of the First National Bank in Lawrence, was selected for honorary membership about a year ago but has not been initiated. The KU chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma had not been established while he was an undergraduate. Two juniors, representing the upper 1 per cent of their class in the School of Business, were honored by election. They are Frank H. Ise, Wichth; and Homer Eugene Paris III, Leawood. Seniors chosen are: Russell W. Beasley, Topeka; James Lee Chance, Coffeyville; Vern D. Kornelsen, Inman; and Charles R. Shaver, Lawrence Graham T. Hunt, Mission graduate student is the other new member. Minnesota was the nation's number two honey-producing state in 1956, with a total production of 19,440,000 pounds of honey. Take a Break From Those Studies Crank up your trusty machine and join your friends at the University Daily Kansan 1300 West 23rd J&L DRIVE-IN Relax with a delicious sandwich or shoot the breeze over a tall, cool glass of root beer. Take Home A Gallon For Only 65c Eye Drive To Be Held April 8-13 "New Eyes for the Needy" is the name of a drive sponsored by the Lawrence Alumni Club of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority April 8-13. The drive is being handled for "New Eyes for the Needy Inc.," a non-profit, non-sectarian, philanthropic organization. Through the nation-wide collection of discarded eyeglasses, jewelry, and scrap gold and silver, it provides eyeglasses and artificial eyes for underprivileged people. A box for the articles will be placed in the Student Union during the week of the drive. Students are asked to bring back any old eye-lasses, jewelry, or scrap gold and silver. The first Olympic Games were held in Greece in 776 B. C. NOW is the time to buy your tickets to the Rock Chalk Revue ALL SEATS ARE RESERVED Main Floor $1.00 $1.25 Friday Saturday Balcony 75c $1.00 TICKETS ON SALE NOW AT THE INFORMATION BOOTH AND UNION TICKET CENTER Hoch Auditorium April 12 & 13 (Friday and Saturday after Spring Vacation) --- Royal College Shop