Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday. March 13, 1961 SENORS Y SENORITAS—Latin American students entertained the 400 guests at the International Club Banquet by singing "Cielito Lindo" on the spur of the moment. Grouped around the piano in the southeast corner of the ballroom under the balcony the students sang with gusto and tried to encourage the audience to sing the chorus with them but without success. The Latin American combo furnished the music for dancing later in the evening. Some guests and students in national dress of Norway, China and Latin America were dancing the Cha Cha at 9 p.m. Other students and guests were talking about the success and better organization of the Banquet this year as compared to last year's banquet. Last year, people were lined up down to the first floor of the Kansas Union door for two hours while they waited to pick up the food buffet style. Applications for appropriations for campus organizations are now available in the All Student Council office in the Kansas Union. The ASC office is open from 1 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The deadline for applications is Thursday. ASC Appropriations Applications Ready Sigma Chi Wins Scholarship Award The award is presented by the fraternity's national office to the chapter of Sigma Chi having the grade point average with the highest percentage of men above the all men's average at its university. Sigma Chi fraternity has won the Daniel William Cooper Award in scholarship for 1959-60. Sigma Chi had a 1.67 grade point average for 1959-60. This is the first time the KU chapter has received the award since it was established in 1940. Jr. Highers to Music Camp A music camp for junior high school students will be held at KU for the first time this summer. The camp will be a division of KU's 24th annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp for senior high students, and will be held July 9-23. Enrollment will be limited to about 300 students in a 300-400 mile radius of Lawrence. Library Stacks Open at K-State MANHATTAN — (UPI) — Kansas State University has announced that it has inaugurated an "open stack" policy for students at Farrell Library. This means that students may browse through the library stacks and select books they want to borrow. In the past, only graduate students, faculty, and honor students were granted this privilege. Others were required to fill out cards indicating the books they wanted which were then removed from the stacks by library personnel. A K-State spokesman said the new open policy is designed to make books and reference materials more readily available to users. Students enter and leave the stacks through a turnstile and members of the library staff check their books as they depart. Art Expert to Speak Fridav An authority on 19th century American art will speak here Friday. Edgar P. Richardson, director of the Detroit Art Institute, will give an illustrated lecture on "Dream of Antiquity: The Neo-Classic in America" at 4 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The lecture, sponsored by the art history department, is open to the public. Fate makes our relatives, choice makes our friends. —Jacques Delille Vox Answers (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) "Last fall we did two things that hurt Vox who helped student government. "First we split up elections departing from the old system of electing all the ASC representatives in the Spring. I think KU student government has progressed very rapidly under this system. But it hurt Vox because it made it easier for another political party to slip in the back door. "Then Larry Moore (Topeka junior), our vice presidential candidate, introduced a bill that split the dormitory district into large and small dormitory districts. This might have hurt Vox but it helped student government because the members of these newly formed districts have more in common." Eberhart said that Vox has been a proponent of clean student government since its start in 1958. He said that one of the first things Vox did as a party was to end the old days of ballot-stuffing with a new IBM balloting system. Reed's charge of Vox inactivity was answered by Eberhart with a list of eight legislative items proposed by Vox representatives. Eberhart said Vox could claim credit for the original civil rights legislation, establishment of a transportation center, introduction and passage of the NSA resolution on freedom of expression, better lighting for girl's dormitory areas, establishment of a NSA policy committee, bringing the NSA regional convention to KU, introduction of a student bill of rights, and plans for a Kansas centennial observance at KU. "We put better student government first. We are willing to cooperate to get the best for the student regardless of who gets the ultimate credit. We feel that better student government will make things better for Vox. "After our members get on the council we urge them to vote as their conscience dictates. We do not hold party caucuses before ASC meetings. "According to what Reed said Thursday they must place their party above student government. Pays to Advertise MINNEAPOLIS — (UPI)— The sign on a Minneapolis apartment building recently attracted more than its share of attention. It read: "For Rent-3 or 4 girls. Spacious, amply furnished and equipped. Convenient. Inquire within." It's what's up front that counts FILTER-BLEND up front is a Winston exclusive. It makes Winston really taste like a cigarette. Filter-Blend means tobaccos specially selected and specially processed for good taste in filter smoking. Try Winston. d. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N.C. WINSTON TASTES GOOD like a cigarette should!