Council for Progress to Determine Finances The executive committee of the Council for Progress will begin discussions Saturday to determine the what, where, and how of next year's fund-raising campaign. Stanley Learned, president of Phillips Petroleum Co. of Bartlesville, Okla., and chairman of the committee, called the meeting to initiate consideration of recommendations reported to the Oct. 29 council by the university A total of 15 of the 19 committee members are expected for the all day meeting in the Kansas Union. committee on objectives for the second century. In addition to Learned and Surface, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe; Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the Endowment Association; Richard Wintermeet, executive secretary of the Alumni Association; and Maurice Barker, fund director for the Endowment Association, will be present. liams, Lawrence attorney and land management adviser; Dr. Jack Carter, KU Medical Center; and Ellis Bever, Wichita attorney. SeektoReduce KU's Catalog THE REPORT outlined 16 needs in the areas of student assistance, faculty development, and supporting resources for which private support will be sought in the campaign. Also Arthur Cromb, Shawnee Mission and member of the Board of Regents; Herman R. Sutherland, Shawnee Mission and president of Sutherland Lumber Company; H. E. Crawford, Grosse Pointe Park, Mich., and director of the General Motors Corp. marketing staff; and Jack H. McDonald, LaJolla, Calif., and president of the San Diego Imperial Corp. will be there. Dolph Simons Sr., president and editor of the Lawrence JournalWorld, who was recently appointed to the committee in place of the late Maurice Breidenthal Sr., of Kansas City, will also be present. OTHERS INCLUDE Paul Gilles, professor of chemistry; Odd Wil- The KU catalog becomes Exhibit A in the successful solution file. Problem: Make something smaller while it grows larger. Last year the catalog, the general information section and bulletins of the 10 schools bound together, weighed an immodest 47 ounces. 47 ounces. This year it's 40 per cent lighter, a mere 28 ounces, although its 888 pages are 32 more than a year ago and page-size is the same. Another major economy came from the offset printing. The only typesetting needed this year was for changes from last year. The "magic" results from a switch from gloss finish paper stock needed for letterpress printing of pictures to an extremely light paper and offset printing this year. Provest James R. Surface, a committee member, reported that enthusiasm among committee members was high as a result of the "tremendous response" of council members at the October session. The same economies, of course, occurred in the printing of the more widely circulated individual sections of the catalog. The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences bucked the trend and reduced its bulletin to 200 from 212 pages. The expanding programs of the Graduate School caused a 40-page increase there and the School of Fine Arts added four pages. added four pages. The complete K.U. catalog is a "limited edition" item for faculty, high schools, libraries and other colleges. A $2 charge to others discourages collectors." Official Bulletin Foreign Students; Interested in the Michigan State University Christmas Adventures in Understanding? See Dean Coan. 228 Strong, now for 4p Want to Do Something for Your Country This Christmas? Take the December Peace Corps test Monday, Dec. 6. 3 p.m., downtown post office, 7th and Vermont. No prior registration necessary. Daily Kansan Foreign Students: Monday is the last day to sign up for the Dec. 10 Field Trip to the Harry S. Truman Library and Museum in Independence. Sign up in People-to-People office, basement, Kansas University. TODAY Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel. TIGIFF dinner and social after CRES Seminar, 4 p.m. Louis Dellwig, KU, 200, Eng. AIA Continuing Education Workshop, All Day. Kansas Union. 5 Friday, December 3, 1965 w 7 and 9:30 p.m. **Popular** Film **7 and** *Devcho* *Dyche Aud.* Hilburn Friday Night Services. 7.30 Highland Dr. Community Center, Highland Dr. Highland Liz International Club, 8 p.m. weekly International, Kansas Union. meeting voulge Ball, 8 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom Ballroom. "Taming of the Shrew," 8:20 university Theatre. Catholic Mass, 6:45 a.m. and 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, Confessions 4-15 SATURDAY Oread Old Time Musicians, 2 p.m. Yorres Union Popular Film, 7 and 9:30 p.m. "Dracula." Dyche Aud. Tau Sigma Dance Concert, 8:15 p.m. Hoeh Aud. Boch A. "Taming of the Shrew." 8:20 n. University Theatre. SUNDAY Catholic Mass, 8 a.m.-St. Lawrence Chapel: 9.30 and 11. ahm.-Hoch Auw Anne B. Baxter India Club, 2:30 and 5:30 p.m. show- ings of famous Indian film Dyche Cubana University Lutheran Church, 9:45 a.m. bible study; 11 a.m. worship, Strong Hill Church, 8:30 a.m. Gandhi Hall, Delta Student Group, Emmanuel Church, 17th and Vt. Oread Friends Meeting, 10:30 a.m. Danforth Conference meeting, for everyone who's welcome. women even more. Burlison Recital, 3 p.m. Albert Gerken. GerKen: Migma Dance Concert, 3:30 p.m. Hugh Aug. Hoen AuD. Lutheran Student Association, 5:30 p.m. Alcove C of Union. Speaker; Prof. Walter Sandellus.