Page 3 All Women's Day Set For Monday by AWS All Women's Day is set for May 1 but will unofficially start Sunday with an exchange dinner between women's living groups. On May 1 the activities will begin with a junior-senior breakfast which will be served in the Kansas Union Ballroom. ALL WOMEN'S DAY activities will close with an Honor Night. The theme of All Women's Day, "Aren't Women Something," will carry through the different awards to be made that night. The Honor Night program will begin at 7 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. All faculty and University women are urged to attend. Other activities will be the an nouncement of the winner of the KU Women's Memorial Scholarship Fund. The fund, which began in 1948, will go toward a scholarship for a deserving KU woman in memory of female students who died while enrolled at the University. Eight women have died here since the start of the fund. Highlighting the Honor Night will be Ann Landers, a Chicago columnist, as principal speaker. THE NEW MEMBERS of the honorary organization of Mortar Board and Phi Beta Kappa, honorary groups, will be announced. The winner of the annual outstanding senior woman award sponsored by the American Assn. of University Women will be revealed. The "Women in Our World" will be presented. They represent what their houses believe to be the women who have contributed the most during the past year. The women were elected by members of their houses. Wayne Replogle, assistant KU football coach, and Mrs. Ernest Pontius, of Lawrence have a joint display of their paintings on exhibit in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Replogle's Paintings On Display in Union Mr. Replogle has been painting since the 1930s. Mrs. Pontius has been painting for 3 years. This is the third public exhibit of her work. Painting is a hobby for both. The basic theme of the combined show is western scenes, Landscapes, Indians and farmhouses are among the subjects depicted. Fifteen paintings by each artist are on display until Friday. Speed Trap Draws Rooters About 20 men took advantage of the recent mild weather to encourage two campus policemen operating a speed trap on West Campus Drive between Joseph R. Pearson and Carruth-O'Leary men's residence halls. The group packed itself around the detection device, commenting loudly on the merits of speed traps. When speeders were caught the groups cheered the efficiency of the police force and radar. It was noted that a similar group gathered at the Chi Omega fountain in order to warn drivers of the presence of the trap. It is estimated, however, that about 20 drivers were apprehended exceeding the speed, including a Lawrence police officer. KU Bacteriologists Speak at Chicago Four staff members of the bacteriology department are scheduled to present papers at the national meeting of the American Society for Microbiology which ends Wednesday in Chicago. The staff members will present the papers with their graduate students. The staff members are David Paretsky, professor of bacteriology and chairman of the department; Cora M. Downs, professor of bacteriology; Delbert M. Shankel, assistant professor of bacteriology and Christopher P. Sword, assistant professor of bacteriology. Graduate students participating are Martha Schmidt, Gordon, Neb.; Tom Shikashio, Blackfoot, Idaho; Louis Mallavia and Allan Armstrong, both of Lawrence. Fund Display Is Up A Greater University Fund display, pointing out the ways in which private support contributes to all aspects of University society, is on exhibit in the Kansas Union until Sunday. Included in the display are 2 rare books purchased with funds donated by the Solon Summerfield Foundation, a 19th century painting given to the Museum of Art by a Hutchinson alumni, charts showing the growth of the use of student loan funds, and some publications which explain the administration of student loans and scholarships. Maurice E. Barker, executive secretary of the Greater University Fund, expressed the belief that the number of alumni and friends who contribute to KU private support will continue to increase. Mr. Barker said that one-fourth of all KU students are here only because of scholarships and loan funds obtained from private support contributions. The greatest glory of a freeborn people is to transmit that freedom to their children.—William Harvard Monday, April 24.1961 University Daily Kansan Professor Springer Gets Position in Germany George Springer, professor of mathematics, has been appointed as a Fulbright program lecturer and research professor at the University of Wurzburg, Germany, for the 1961-1962 academic year. This is the second such appointment that has been given to Prof. Springer. During 1954-55 he was a Fulbright lecturer to the University of Munster, Germany. The Fulbright fellowship is awarded to approximately 500 American teachers by the U. S. State Department each year. New!! JBL Signature Model D130 Extended Range Speaker This is the speaker made for quality sound. Its shallow cone permits an excellent distribution of highs when it is used as an extended range speaker. Its 4" voice coil makes for a crisp, clean base reproduction. See it at FESCO Hi-Fidelity 928 Mass. VI 3-8500 COLOR-SEASONED BREEZE-CONDITIONED Natural shouldered summer suits with styles more defined colors never before so beautifully blended fabrics never so easily cared for. Drop in and see these style-favored spring & summer suits. H-I-S (wash & wear) 29.95 to 35.00 Northcool (wash & wear) 39.95 to 42.95 Gordon-Ford (wash & wear) 42.50 Linett (dacron & wool) 59.50 to 65.00 Louis Goldsmith (dacron & wool) 45.00 to 55.00 University Shop ON THE HILL