--- University Daily Kansan, October 29, 1980 Page 7 After two months of practice, two KU student choirs will give fall concerts this week. KU choirs to perform at fall concerts The University Singers, a 60-voice freshman choir will perform at 8 tonight at 8 p.m. Friday. The 26-voice Concert Choir will present its fall concert. nsan staff , the shawk and at the ov. 8. Both performances will be in Swainthorot Recital Hall in Murhayt Hall. The choirs will sing both classical and contemporary selections ranging from Die Beresamkeit* by Joseph Haydn, to Your Foot* by Aaron Copland. The University Singers will be con- duced by Jamen Ralston, KU director Banes, Bane, assistant director of choral activity. J. Perry White, assistant professor of choral music education, will conduct the To prepare for this semester's concerts, choir members have practiced three days a week since the August auditions. In return they will receive one hour of credit and a chance to perform. Choir auditions are open to all KU students, Ralston said. At the auditions, students are asked to bring a solitary and to sight-read for them. "In auditions, the talents vary from good ability to . . . questionable," Ralston said. However, by the time choirs perform in fall concerts, the students have learned to sing well together, said Ralston, who has conducted the University Singers since the group's second year in 1966. After this week's concerts, all University choirs and orchestras will combine their talents Nov. 23 in the Mornings at the Stravinka Symphony of Psalms. The students will perform together the "Songs of the Vespers, KU's annual Christmas concert." Discussion examines sex-role beliefs By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter All 40 members of the discussion group relaxed in their chairs, eyes closed, as the quiet voice of one of the leaders droned on. "Take a deep breath, hold it ... now let it out," the voice directed. "Relax your body. Feel the tension in your face, and concentrate on relaxing it." AFTER A FEW minutes, a bush filled the room, and the participants seemed to be concentrating as the voice continued. "You should be feeling content now. Think of yourself as who you are as a person, what your life is like. Now think for a moment that all that can change. If you are a man, think what it would be like to be a woman, physically. If you are a woman, think what it would be like to be a man." After a few moments of thought, the voice instructed the participants to bring down bodies and to the room. The "empathy exercise" had come to an end. John Macchiotto, the man behind the voice in the discussion, titled "The Women's Movement and Men," asked recipients how it felt to change genders. Macchiotto is a member of the Men's Coalition, one of two campus groups that sponsored the discussion last night in the Kansas Union. "I felt a little more helpless," said Kyle Krull, Teokerena student. "On a professional level, I see how women feel, how men in business tend to push them around. And I felt physically smaller." One woman in the group said, "I felt a tightness in my throat, like all my emotional systems were shutting down. That was a very negative feeling. On the positive side, I felt good in a situation where I wasn't the low person on the tootem pole, I was the administrator sitting behind the desk telling others how it would be." "I felt I lost a lot of the freedom to do things that I do as a male." Ken Ward, an editor at the magazine, goes out alone at night, and I felt isolated in a world where men have the power." THE EXPERIMENT, Macchietto said, proved that men and women have definite ideas that about the roles and duties that are proper for each of the sexes. During this time of ever-changing roles, it is unfortunate that people get stuck in traditional male and female stereotypes, said Amika Nilsson, a sociologist on the Status of Women, the other group sponsoring the discussion. Many men never learn the value of being a nurturing person, of cooking, or of knowing how to care for a child, Nilsson said. “It’s important for us to separate the sex-role stereotypes from the gender of a person,” she said. “You can be a boy or a girl, however you want and still be a boy.” "It's not only a matter of what people have a right to do, but a matter of practically," she said. "It could be that a male has talents in areas concerned with his own waste to the individual and to society if he isn't allowed to use those Talents." Why Frye? No one has been able to duplicate our unique Frye look. Whether it's our exclusive Classic, Western, or Casual boots, Frye has a style to fit your lifestyle. It's part of what makes Frye boots impossible to duplicate. And quality is another reason they cannot be duplicated. boots are benchcrafted by skilled hands, not rolled off an assembly line. So while our styles may change, our quality and craftsmanship will always remain the same. The best. 819 Mass. 843-3470 to dramatize the need for more — and better — hiking trails, hikers are currently walking the 4,500 mile route on one of two Francisco to Salta roads. Why do you discover a stant grain dishage while you rediscover an amulet? Your beauty on film or if your food is selective you can win one of the following prizes: List Price: 10 to be awarded (18 to be awarded) Top quality goose down sleeping bag with a insulated lining for $175. 2nd Price: (10 to be ordered) Top quality backpack, your choke of style, color, size with 50% discount. Srd Price: $50. Compete cook set with a maximum retail value of $50. one per unit) GRAND PRIZE: Your choice of a 32mm (1 to be awarded) 56 cameras with a maximum range of 400 meters. Take a snapshot of a revitalizing setting. Write a story that may depict any memories from your past, and preserve them as a physical object that may be taken by a brief camera. You may be able to capture no longer visible images but may have a brief memory of someone you loved. Create the environment in which the narrative takes place and use color and composition no longer available for photography of General Food Corporation and MONROE NHL INC. The photographs will be submitted to the Photography category of the Company. Use a wide-angle lens or a wide-angle tripod to capture the scene. Avoid any advertising or promotional materials of the Company when writing the story. 2. On a paper sheet of 3 × 3 inches, draw four point star shapes, and mark all with your favorite color. Add points to the star shapes using **POSITION**. Give each point a name (e.g., top left, bottom right). Give each point a coordinate system. Every angle average will be marked by the center of the star shape. Every angle average will be marked by the center of the star shape. Every angle average will be marked by the center of the star shape. Every angle average will be marked by the center of the star shape. Every angle average will be marked by the center of the star shape. Every angle average will be marked by the center of the star shape. 3. Surveys Virginia, Maryland, and Virginia. You must测出 all four state where your star shape is located. 3. Ensure that the user selects the required entries for the supervisor ID (D). New Supervisor or Administrator must enter their ID (D) in the required fields. The administrator must then enter the required entries for the manager ID (M). New Manager or Administrator must enter their ID (M) in the required fields. The administrator must then enter the required entries for the employee ID (E). New Employee or Administrator must enter their ID (E) in the required fields. 4. All animals must be rescued by June 15. 1. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 2. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 3. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 4. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 5. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 6. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 7. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 8. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 9. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 10. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 11. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 12. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 13. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 14. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 15. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 16. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 17. All animals must and the ground species are rescued. 18. 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The project is managed by the American Society of Physicians for Geriatric Care (ASPC), the National Society of Pediatrics, the American Society of Pediatrics, and the Institute for Pediatric Health Sciences. The board of directors is composed of: NewHaven is co-sponsored by the American Hiking Society and the Department of the Interior. Postum is a registered trademark of General Foods Corp. White Plains, NY 10625 KU space center receives grant The grant will fund a program that adapts NASA technology for use in small businesses and industries in Kansas. The program will employ KU mechanical engineering master's and doctoral students who will work with small businesses to become familiar with their goals. The students will later work with a NASA center. "Our aim is to work with small Kansas businesses and industries, which usually have more innovative attitudes than large companies, but need technical expertise to research and use NASA technology for innovations to improve their productivity and economy." B. G. Barr, director of the KU Space Technology Center, said. Wednesday night is LADIES NIGHT at Mingles All drinks, all night long just 50c for the ladies and only 25c draws don't miss it . . . Mingles . . . at the Ramada Inn You can run. You can win. You can help... Student Senate Elections Filing Deadline: Oct. 31, 5:00 P.M. B105 Kansas Union A Rare Combination KU and Senator Berman During the past four years, with Senator Berman's efforts, KU has seen: - Improved student salaries. - Increased state scholarships for Kansas students. - A 60 percent graduate student tuition fee waiver. - Budget growth of more than 90 percent. - A 50 percent salary increase for classified personnel and more than - 42 percent for unclassified staff. - An increase in employment by 550 people. - $45,000,000 of new capital construction. State Senator ARNOLD BERMAN This Senator Gets Things Done! Pol. Adv. Pol. Adv. Paid for by Committee to Re-Elect Arnold Berman Marcia C. Foster, Treasurer, 749-1615