Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday. May 12. 1961 Catholic Priest Warned To Cooperate With Fidel MIAMI — (UFI) — A man presented as a Roman Catholic priest said in a broadcast over Cuba's official radio-TV network last night that churchmen who do not cooperate with Fidel Castro will be treated as "traitors." "I believe many priests in Cuba are deceived by false propaganda," said the purported pastor, who gave his name as Guillermo Sardina. "At this time, all priests who try to put obstacles in the government's line of march will be classified as traitors to the country." Sardina, speaking 10 days after Castro had announced that only hand-picked foreign priests would be allowed to remain in Cuba, appealed to churchmen in this country to continue offering religious services. "You will be respected by the government as long as you dedicate yourselves to religious tasks," he said. Refu $ ^{a} $ees reaching Miami said Castro's purge of foreign priests and nuns has so diminished the number of churchmen available for duty that services were being held only in Cuba's largest churches. Students Visit Pen A group of 29 KU students are visiting Leavenworth prison this afternoon to talk with the 6 editors of the prison magazine, the New Era. The students are members of a speech class. Bases of Oral Communication. They left by bus at noon. The leader of the group is Cecil Coleman, instructor of speech. She said the talks with the 6 editors will center around a recent issue of their magazine that was devoted entirely to articles on juvenile delinquency. Photograph Display In Kansas Union The Photography in Fine Arts Exhibit II, a step toward obtaining acceptance of photography as a fine art, will be shown in the Kansas Union until May 22. Included in the display are 176 pictures, from 129 photographers. The pictures were chosen by a jury of 12 people comprising PFA's National Advisory Committee. All of the jurors have spent their careers in the fine arts. THE JURY'S SELECTIONS were made from more than 800 color and monochrome prints that were submitted through many photographic, professional, amateur and publishing organizations. Also included are several landscape pictures, such as "Farm Near Caledonia, Minn," by John Szarkowski, and "Norway Fjord, 1809," by Ernst Haas. OTHES PHOTOS ARE "Khrushchev and Lincoln," by Burt Glinn; "The Terrified Deer," by Phil Glickman; "Assembly Line," by Robert Boram, and "Street Cleaner, Florence," by Evelyn Hafer. The exhibit was shown in the Metropolitan Museum of Art last year. Ingemanson Is IFC President Paul Ingemanson, Topeka junior, was elected president of the Interfraternity Council at an IFC meeting at the Kansas Union. Other officers elected are: Neal McCoy, Winfield, vice president; Gerald Buttron, Lancaster, secretary, both juniors; Laura Ward, Ottawa sophomore, treasurer. Those elected to the IFC executive council are: Eugene Lee, Wichita; Roger Schmanke, Ottawa; Robert Keller, Greensburg; James Carr, Carthage, Mo.; and Fredic LaMar, Alma. All are sophomores. The new officers will be installed at the next meeting of the IFC May 28. Sardina said the Castroite seizur of U.S. property in Cuba was necessary "to guarantee the sovereignty of the country against imperialism." He said the confiscation of American property was "ratified" by a mass meeting in Havana on Aug. 6, 1960. Although the purported priest made several other references to "imperialism" — Castroite synonym for anything American — he evaded a direct answer when he was asked whether he thinks President Kennedy was a good Catholic. Band Concert Sunday The University Concert Band will present its annual spring concert at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre. Russell L. Wiley, professor on band, will direct the band in featured numbers including "Suite of Old American Dances," by Robert Russell Bennett; "Variations on a Theme by Haydn" by Brahms; "Tunbridge Fair" by Walter Piston; "Concerto for Trumpet" by Haydn, and "Lineoln Portrait" by Aaron Couland. Admission is $1 or the presentation of an ID. Graduate Chosen A KU graduate has been chosen by Tyrone Guthrie, internationally known theater director, as an assistant in the advanced training program of the new Tyrone Guthrie Repertory Theater in Minneapolis. Alfred G. Rossi will serve for two years in that position. He received his M.A. in speech and drama last year and has been doing acting and stage managing in the Fred Miller Theater in Milwaukee, Wis. Guthrie first came to the United States from England in 1935, to direct a play for the Theater Guild. He has also worked in Canada. Theater Conference Here This Weekend The ninth annual Children's Theatre Conference of the American Educational Theater Association will be held at KU today and tomorrow. The conference is expected to attract approximately 150 elementary school teachers, college professors, service club representatives, recreation leaders and community theater workers from a four state area. Representatives from Kansas, Missouri, Iowa, and Nebraska will join in the meeting which is especially designed to implement recommendations of the 1960 White House Conference on Children and Youth. At 8:30 tonight the KU Children's Theatre will give a repeat performance of the production, "Winnie the Pooh." The play will be under the direction of Jed Davis, director of The Children's Theatre. Seven Air Force ROTC cadets received honors for outstanding achievement at a Cadet Group Review Tuesday morning. Seven Air Cadets Honored at Review Cadet Col. John Durrett, Prairie Village senior, and Cadet T/Sgt Leigh Stamets, Clay Center junior, received the Professor of Air Science Gold Medal for academic excellence. Cadet Airman First Class Billy Lucas, Mapleton sophomore, and Cadet Airman Basic Gary Muller were awarded the Professor of Air Science Silver Medal. The silver medal is awarded on the same basis as the gold medal, but is for sophomores and freshmen. Cadet Airman First Class James Lewis, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, was presented with the Convair award for flying interest and all-round achievement. Cadet Airman First Class Frank Gasperich, Sand Springs, Okla. sophomore, and Cadet Airman First Class Robert Ash Jr., Lawrence sophomore, were given the Cadet of the Month Award for March and April, respectively. The awards were presented by Lt. Col. Robert P. Ash, Professor of Air Science. K. U. JAZZ FORUM illustrated by Jazz Musicians presents JAZZ COMPOSITION SUNDAY, MAY 14 - 8:00 P.M. 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