10 Friday, October 4,1974 University Daily Kansan http://www.alibaba.com.cn/ Religious dialogues A Lutheran-Catholic dialogue has been established through the cooperation of four Lutheran churches and two Catholic churches in Lawrence. A series of six Sunday discussions will begin at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 11, 2014. These discussions will focus on four themes considered are the Creed as the basis for dogma, baptism, the Eucharist, the ministry and the Papacy. The series will conclude with a forum Nov. 10. Scholarship begun The department of geology at KU announced the establishment of the L. C. Hay Fund in geology. The fund was set up through a gift $11,100 to the Kansas University Endowment Association from Hay, a graduate of the university. He is now the Chairman of the E. Angino, chairman of the department said, but it initially will be used to establish the L. C. Hay Undergraduate Tuition Scholarship in geology. Spanish award Dee Jo Boyce, Lawrence senior recently won the Marguerite Exter Prize awarded by the KU department of Spanish and Portuguese. The prize includes $75 and is awarded on the basis of excellence of scholarship in Spanish. The award was established by family and former students of Mrs. Exter, a KU alumna, as a tribute to her years of foreign language instruction. Bike club tour The Mt. Oread Bicycle Club is sponsoring the annual October Octogintta, an 80-mile tour of Jefferson County and the Lake Perry area, at 8 a.m. Sunday at the South Park bandstand. Enquiries are available at octogintta.org or by calling (212) 354-6798. Riders will receive a souvenir T-shirt, lunch and a chance for prizes. Also on campus . . . Friday, the German Kaffeefest will meet at 1 p.m. in the Meadowlark Room of the Kansas Union. Saturday, a life planning workshop will be offered from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the United Ministries Center, 1248 Oread. It is open to students, faculty and townpeople. Sunday, the Bridge Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. in Parlor A of the Union. KU MOUNTAINEERING/BACKPACKING CLUB Backpacking Workshop Lake Perry, Oct. 4-5 Classes include: pack packing, map reading, outdoor cooking, hike prep. and foot care, etc. Call the SUA Office for Information (864-3477) The Student Senate is accepting budget requests for the allocation of student activity fees. Organizations requesting initial or supplemental funding for the fiscal year 1975 can obtain request forms from the Student Senate office, 104B in the Kansas Union. Call 864-3746 for information. All Requests Due Before 5:00 p.m. October 4,1974 No Late Requests Will Be Considered Financed with Student Activity Fees Join the ride of the year . . . SUNDAY, OCT. 6, eight a.m., SOUTH PARK Promoted by the Mt. Oread Bicycle Club entry forms available at SUA Office, Kansas Union (Entries available at line) Design . . . From Page One influenza epidemics proved the facilities to be grossly inadequate. UNFORTUNATELY, nothing was done to alleviate this problem until Mrs. J. B. Watkins offered to build a University hospital in 1931. This facility became obsolete in recent years and has been replaced by the new Watkins Health center. Although many plans for buildings have been proposed there has been some difficulty in selecting the type of building that has been accepted, and in making sure that these plans are architecturally and structurally sound. Old Fraser Hall was an example where the building was not properly planned. It was not built upon bedrock, and soon after it was built old Fraser Hall started to settle, causing the structure to crack in many places, and repairs on the structure were quite costly. THERE WAS ONE addition to old Fraser Hall that cost the University relatively little. The Insane Asylum at Osawatome ordered a portico for one of its buildings. When it arrived it didn't fit the building, so it was given to KU. Although Old Fraser Hall was loved and admired by both students and faculty, it was torn down in the early '60s. Its replacement on campus was a new Fraser Hall, built in the same architectural style as Blake Hall. For many students and faculty the design of Blake Hall was bad enough, and when the building would be sold new Praser in the same architectural style many protests and petitions appeared. THE ARCHITECTURE DEPARTMENT dismayed any knowledge of, or association with, the building plans and design of new Fraser Hall. One faculty member said, "It looks like one of those hotels in a monopoly game." Some students were disappointed with the new structure. Many thought it looked like a barn with two onethousers on top of the roof. Some thought it didn't come out on April Fool's day." Student criticism of Fraser Hall and other buildings on campus is still prevalent today. Fraser may no longer be a Monopoly hotel, but the building has been the biggest graham-cracker box on campus. SUA Presents Brother Sun, Sister Moon POPULAR SERIES Oct. 4, Fri. 7:00 9:30 Oct. 5, Sat. 7:00 9:30 Director: Franco Zeffirelli Graham Faulkner Flight of the Doves CHILDREN'S SERIES Oct. 6. Sunday Oct. 6, Sunday Woodruff 1:30 Dorothy McGuire Admission 75°—Woodruff Auditorium PHOTO NOW AVAILABLE ILFORD PHOTOGRAPHIC PRODUCTS BLACK and WHITE FILM BLACK and WHITE PRINTING PAPER HP4 13520 FILM 85¢ Roll 1107 Mass. PHOTO ZERCHER Wichita—Topeka—St. Joe—Omaha Ambassador from Japan schedules unofficial visit The Japanese ambassador to the United States, lakeshi Yasukawa, will pay an unofficial visit to the University of Kansas and attend dinner and meeting with Japanese students. Chancellor and Mrs. Archie R. Dykes will host a dinner for Ambassador and Mrs. Yasukawa at 7 p.m., at the Lawrence Country Club. The Ambassador will then meet with Japanese students at 8:30 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. Nobukiyu Yasi, president of the KU Japanese Club, said the meeting would be a general discussion of Japanese hap education and student life in the United States. About 40 students are studying Japanese at KU, said Grant Goodman, professor of East Asian Studies. Half of these students are in their first year of study, the other half are in their second to fourth year of the language, he said. Twelve specialized faculty members participate in the East Asian Studies. Ambassader and Mrs. Yasukawa will be greeted by Executive Vice Chancellor Ms. Delbert Shanklet at the Topkea airport and Mrs. Teresa Willingham then go to Goodman's home for cocktails. Ambassador Yasukawa will be stopping at Lawrence on his way to a keynote address at the Kansas City conference on Agricultural Trade with Japan, beginning Tuesday at the Hotel Muehlebau in Kansas City, Mo., Goodman said. LUTHERAN-CATHOLIC DIALOGUE "How do we see ourselves 450 years after the Reformation?" Begins October 6 for six consecutive Sundays 7:30-9 p.m. University Lutheran Church, 15th & Ilae. Open to all interested people in Lawrence and surrounding com- participants are encouraged to do preparatory readings. Sponsored by Catholic and Lutheran congregations in Lawrence. For further information call 843-6662 or 843-0357. SUNDAYS Every Sunday is Family Day at Ken's Pizza. Buy two pizzas, any size and get the third one FREE! Ken's Pizza Parlor DINE IN • CARRY OUT Free Delivery 27th & Iowa 843-7405