12 Friday, September 26, 1975 University Daily Kansan Events ... TODAY: AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF AERONAUTICS AND ASTRONAUTICS will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 290 Learned Hall, COMPUTER SCIENCE undergraduates will meet at 4:30 p.m. in BB Strong Hall, KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Potter Pavilion. CAMUS CRUSADE FOR CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet at 7:30 p.m. at BB14 Bristol Ter. YOUNG SOCIALIST ALLLIANCE will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Javahn Room of the Kansas Union. Tomorrow: CROP-Walk, a fund raising effort for hunger relief organizations, will begin at 2 p.m. at Broken Arrow Park. Announcements . . . KUID CARDS are ready to be picked up at Window I at the Office of Admissions and Decode in Strong Hall. Students must bring their registration. Applications for the BOARD OF DIRECTORS FOR THE CONSUMER AF-FAIRS ASSOCIATION are due Monday at 4 p.m. in the CAA office, room 250 in Kansas Collection gets Hibbs addition Part of the collection of Ben Hibbs, University of Kansas alumnus and former editor-in-chief of the Saturday Evening Post, will arrive at KU sometime next month, according to George Griffin, director of the Kansas Collection. The articles will be kept in Spencer College and will probably in the Kansas Collection, Griffin said. Hibbs, a native Kansan, was born July 23, 1901 in Fontana and grew up in Pretty Prairie. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa from KU with a BA in journalism in 1923. The collection includes business papers, bound copies of the Saturday Evening Post and Country Gentleman magazines when Hibbs was editor of those publications and a few other books, Griffin said Thursday. Hibbs became editor-in-chief of the Saturday Evening Post in 1942 and doubled its circulation during the 20 years he was editor. Hibbs died March 29.1975. Projects... From page one film, for the development of education programs; —overnight accommodations and food services for continuing education students who travel to the campus for seminars and examinations. According to Walker, if plans for the continuing education center were approved by Congress, more than $8 million in federal funds would be provided to construct the center. The facility is one of three being planned across the country that would be demonstration continuing education centers for other institutions, he said. One center is to serve a region, one a community and one a state. KU submitted a proposal for the state center and was chosen to lead the centers and schools in New York and Pennsylvania. Walker said plans called for the center to be built at the corner of 23rd and Iowa streets or north of the Kansas Union where the division of continuing education occupied three temporary buildings and a former sorter house. even a chance someone might die, they should know it," he said. Burket said doctors had to tell patients everything for the doctors' own defense. Medical ethics From page one "It's not really a question of ethics before you give it to the patient should know his condition," she said. The Med Center always receives informed consent for surgery, according to a Med Center staff doctor. He said surgeons told patients there was a chance that they would die or be permanently injured by surgery, although the chance is usually very small. Alternate surgery or treatment and its risks are also explained, he said. Greenberger said he favored a "patients' bill of rights." "I tell my patients their conditions and the different therapy available," be said, "and I think that's how it should be. Doctors should be especially careful to warn patients of possible toxic side effects of any medication used in the presence animosity between the public and the medical profession might be eliminated if this happened because many patients have no expectation of bad effects from medicines." Greenberger said he always stressed the need for frank, open doctor-patient relations in teaching his students at the Med Center. Confidentiality between doctor and patient has been accepted by the medical profession since the time of Hippocrates, but the concept is sometimes stretched Requests . . . From nage one because of today's medical specialization and group practice. Often patients can no longer get complete care from one doctor, but can doctors to discuss patients with each other. and to pay for a telephone, members of the alliance said. The smallest of the fall supplemental requests came from Operation Friendship, which asked for $6.52 to fund either a food drive or clothing drive planned for Lawrence. The organization is a service to students in the Intensive English program. Volunteer Clearing House requested #147 to pay for office equipment and supplies The International Club's request is mainly to help finance the International Festival in April. The organization has held a festival for $1,300, according to members of the club. The KU Rugby Club is seeking refeerees' fees for the Big Eight rugby tournament in Lawrence next spring and to pay for new leersse and advertising costs. An additional $200 of the club's request would be used to send KU delegates to a National Affairs for Foreign Students convention. The Senate committee said that it does not believe because Senate regulations prohibit financing delegates to conventions. The largest of those requests came from the KU Hockey Club, which asked for $3,866. Thomas Hansen, club president, said the funds would be used to rent an ice rink for practices in Kansas City, Mo., to purchase transportation costs for out-of-dome games. Three sports organizations made requests totaling $4,466. The Cricket Club, which has been dormant since 1972, is requesting $250 for new equipment. The committee heard the last of the requests from new organizations seeking McSwan said one of the biggest ethical questions regularly confronting him was how much he should get involved in a patient's medical background. A total of 8,000 students will represent 95 high schools from Kansas and western Missouri in the 28th University of Kansas Band Day Saturday. 8,000 will play in KU Band Day The presentation by Picket, entitled "The Press and the Revolution," will feature music from the Revolutionary period, slides and commentary by him. The bands will parade at 9 a.m. in downtown Lawrence and in the halftime show of the KU-Oregon State football game in the afternoon. This year the number of bands was limited to 109, Tom Stidham, assistant band director, said yesterday. He said the number was limited because of the number of seats available in the stadium and the amount of room on the field. Brinkman said the event at KU was part of the effort by the three major state schools in Tennessee to participate in the Kansas. He said that the combination of the program, luncheon and football game had always been a good attraction and that many journalists had to visit the campus. Last year, he said, 101 bands were scheduled to come to what would have been the largest Band Day in history, but it rained, many schools didn't attend. "The mixing of professional journalists, educators and some students will bring a better appreciation of the roles of each," Brinkman said. "It will give state editors an opportunity to showcase the campus and hands of what's happening at KU and at the journalism school." Lawrence High School will bring the largest high school band, 220 students, from North Central High School from North Central High School in Morrowville, which will bring 25 students. The parade will begin at Central Park, 7th and Kentucky streets. After the parade, the bands are scheduled to go to the stadium to rehearse for 30 to 45 Editor's Day honors two Two journalists will be inducted into the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame Saturday during the University of Kansas' annual Editors' Dav. The KU band will provide the pregame show. For the halftime, the bands will fill the field except for open spaces that will allow the letters US and the United States shield. The purpose of Editor's Day, Brinkman said, is to provide a setting for the exchange of ideas between newspaper men, journalism faculty members and students. The posthumous honor will be bestowed on two men this year because of a tie in the voting, according to Dana Lebengo, assistant dean of the School of Journalism. More than 250 Kansas editors and members of the Kansas Press Association will attend the event, Leibengood said. The program will include speeches by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism, and Calder M. Anderson. Other speakers included Leibengood said the speeches would be followed by a luncheon in the Kansas Union. minutes, Stidham said. The rehearsal is the only time the schools can practice together, but Stidham said he hoped each school have practiced individually in advance. SUA SUR FILMS PRESENTS Lawrence of Arabia Fri., Sept. 26 Sat., Sept. 27 7:30 p.m. only Woodruff Auditorium $1.00 Sun., Sept. 28 Mon., Sept. 29 1984 Possibilities of War In Air 7:30 p.m. 75c The 5000 Fingers of Dr.T. 1:30 p.m. 75c -WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM- Requests of more than $1,000 from the first two nights of hearings were: Friends of Headquarters, $2038; Jayhawk Fencing Club, $1,650; KU-X, $1,011; Campus Association, $97.50; graduate Association, $8,857.50; and Black Student Union, $3,750. The largest of the fall requests came Wednesday night when the University Daily Kansas requested $1,608.16 and JKH-KFM request $1,103.1. initial Senate funding, Rehabilitation in Psychology, a graduate student organization, represent $100,000 fivale rental assistance to the $100,000 subsidize that it will sponsor next spring. Twenty-eight University organizations have requested funds totalling $7,315.79. The Senate has about $2,000 to allocate for the fall semester. 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