Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1957 Foreign Student Banquet Oct.15 The fifth annual banquet of welcome for KU foreign students will be held at 6:30 p.m. Oct.15 in the Student Union Ballroom. John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, will be the guest speaker at the banquet. About 400 persons are expected. The banquet is sponsored by the Douglas County Council for UNESCO whose members buy tickets for foreign students. Glenn L. Kappelman, chairman of the council, said the banquet is the start of a hospitality program in which foreign students are invited to private homes for the weekends and during the holidays. Mrs. Robert Vosper, wife of the director of libraries, will be mistress of ceremonies, Roger Brown, Topeka senior, will sing folk songs. John P. Crown, former mayor of Lawrence, and Clayton Crosier, associate professor of civil engineering, will give short welcoming talks. Written invitations to foreign students whose addresses were obtainable have been sent out. Mr. Kappelman said students who do not get an invitation should call Miss Dixie Davidson, instructor of secretarial training, who is in charge of reservations. Tickets to the dinner cost $1.80 and persons interested in attending should make reservations by Oct 12 with Mr. Kappelman, Clifford P Ketzel, assistant professor of political science, or at Watson Library. ROTC Newspaper Publishing Again The KU Army ROTC unit newspaper, the ROTC Times, is entering its second year of publication. The paper, published twice a week by a cadet staff and two advisers, varies from four to eight pages. Cadet co-editors are Delbert Haley, Kingsdown, and Jon Bergstrom, Kansas City, Mo., seniors. Other staff members are, William Witt, Garden City junior; Claude Kean, Olathe senior; Henry Asbell, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, and Fred Morrison, Colby freshman. KU Voices Heard All Over Austria Voices of KU students were heard last week throughout Austria. Tape recordings of last year's Inter-Fraternity Council song competition and the German department's Christmas play were heard on the National Austrian Radio in a half hour show. Werner Schrotta, an exchange student from Austria last year, made the recordings and had the editor of the radio station agree to put the show on. Schrotta, who was at KU on a Fulbright scholarship, is now studying at the University of Vienna. A new short-wave transmitter is said to be 50 times as effective as the most powerful commercial broadcasting station and capable of beaming its messages to any spot on earth despite severe interference. KUOK Program Schedule Tuesday. Oct. 8 6:00 Report One 6:05 Sincerely Yours 6:30 Niki's Notes 6:45 Spotlight Time 7:00 Bookstore Hour 8:00 Wire News 8:05 KUOK Concert 8:30 UDK Sports 8:45 Final Scope 9:00 Starlight Time 9:30 The Folk Singer 9:45 The Folk Singer 10:00 Your Date With Music 10:30 Lucky Strike Music 11:00 Cool Breeze 12:00 Sign Off Tonight At 7:30 The Quarterback Club presents Movies of the Colorado Game Kansas Room - Student Union EVERYONE WELCOME! CHECK THAT PORTABLE Do The Batteries Work? EVEREADY—FRESH STOCK BIRD TV-RADIO JACK W. NEIBARGER, Prop. VI 3-8855 908 Mass. Ours is a complete Audio Service . . Recorded dance music service .Complete tape and disc recording service . . Small PA rentals .. Tape Recorder repair also Our New Equipment Show Room At 928 Mass. Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters. A lot of man . . . a lot of cigarette "He gets a lot to like-filter, flavor, flip-top box." The works. A filter that means business.An easy draw that's all flavor.And the flip-top box that ends crushed cigarettes. (MADE IN RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, FROM A PRIZED RECIPE)