--- Fridav. Sant, 99, 1054 University Daily Kansas Page 7 OUR FOOTBALL TEAM n to the Orange Bowl PROBABLE STARTERS BEAT C.O.P. College of Pacific Farrell Funston (210) John Nisby (230) Galen Laack (221) Jack O'Rourke (207) Bob Lee (205) Bill Striegel (222) Bob Denton 224) Pim Reynosa (170) Dick Bass (195) Tom Perry (196) Tom Green (195) Kansas Don Martin (212) Frank Gibson (215) Don Pfutzenreuter (159) Galen Wahlmeir (210) Bob Kraus (212) Jim Hull (220) Bill Bell (199) Dave Preston (190) John Francisco (179) Bill Horn (190) Homer Floyd (164) BEAT C.O.P. This Saturday Afternoon . . . for your favorite beverage .. and the best hamburgers in town ... try ... ...the OLD MISSION 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 Game Day Special! Served before and after the game FRIED CHICKEN $1.00 With Potato Salad, Rolls and Butter Regular Menu all day HAPPY HAL'S East 23rd VI 3-9753 WE'RE BEHIND COACH MATHER AND THE TEAM Take Wisconsin Offers Dual Program MADISON, Wis. —(IP)—Men and women who have earned the bachelor's degree in a liberal arts college may now, in two semesters and a summer of residence study at the University of Wisconsin, earn both a master's degree and teacher's certificate. This educational new deal is made possible by a reshuffling of graduate and undergraduate requirements in three Schools of Education programs. Program 3 is geared to those equipped to teach in secondary schools but who find they prefer to teach younger children, and to those who wish to strengthen their potential as future prin-pals, supervisors, or superintendents of schools by preparing themselves in both the elementary and secondary fields. According to Dean Lindley Stiles, likely candidates for Programs 1 and 2 include well-educated men and women who find themselves unprepared for jobs; those who have tried a field in which they do not wish to continue, married women whose husbands are still in the university and who wish to prepare to earn a living, older women whose families are grown and who wish to enter the teaching field, and widows who find it necessary to earn a living. "Graduates of all these programs have the advantage of the higher salaries which teachers with masters' degrees command," Dean Stiles said. Students admitted to Program 1 must complete a minimum of 31 semester hours work in professional education courses. Students in Program 2 will do a minimum of 20 semester hours work in professional education courses and 12 semester hours in graduate courses in the teaching field. Program 3, for graduates who have met the requirements for a secondary school teaching certificate, requires a minimum of 33 semester hours, a seminar paper, and the master's exam. Mental Health Booklet Released A citizen's pamphlet on "Mental Health in Kansas—Community Action" was released Thursday by the Governmental Research Center at the University. The booklet, written by Margaret Cram, research analyst for the center, discusses the statewide mental health program of Kansas with emphasis on what is and can be done locally. Community action is analyzed from the aspects of the general public, professional people, mental health associations, guidance centers, state hospital outpatient clinics, and other services the state provides for communities. Another pamphlet will soon be released, dealing with the mental hospital program of Kansas. The two, read as a single report, will provide the reader the full import of the attack on mental illness being made in Kansas. Music Fraternity Plans Rush Smoker Plans for a rush smoker, to be held Oct. 7 in the Student Union, were made at a meeting of Phi Mu Alpha, professional musical fraternity. Thursday. About 20 peons are being considered for membership in the fraternity, said Don Beene, Lawrence senior and president of the club. To be eligible for membership, a student must be of sophomore standing, a music major, and have a grade point average of 1.6. Correction Roger Geery, Salina sophomore, was omitted from the list of men in Monday's Kansan who were initiated into Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, Sunday. Eight presidents were born in Ohio.