SDS Makes Debut On National Show Twenty-five students, members of the Students for a Democratic Society, have accepted a challenge issued by Manhattan College in New York to compare knowledge about American citizenship during a nationally televised program tomorrow. THE MANHATTAN College group had originally challenged the Viet Nam Day committee at the University of California at Berkeley, but were turned down with the excuse that the Viet Nam Day students were "too busy planning future protest demonstrations against U.S. military policy." Upon hearing this, the KU students immediately offered to take the place of the Berkeley group and were accepted. The two university groups will match scores during the "National Citizenship Test," audience-involvement program on CBS-TV Tuesday night at 10 p.m. EST. The hour-long TV special, whose advisory board includes Hubert H. Humphrey, U.S. vice-president, and Senate minority leader, Everett Dirksen (R-Ill.), will ask 42 questions designed to test Americans' knowledge of their rights as well as their responsibilities as citizens. Campus Volunteers Enrich Lives of Lawrence Youth KU-Y Backs Projects KU students are developing new friendships with children and enriching the lives of the children as well as their own in two KU-Y supported youth programs. The KU-Y Youth Friendship program and the Children's Hour, Inc., of Lawrence are volunteer programs. Larry Henderson and Jeanette Austin, both Eskridge seniors, head the Youth Friendship program. Linda Gilna, Manhattan junior, and Bonnie Stenzel, Ness City junior, head KU-Y members participating in the Lawrence project. Being a friend to a child in need is the goal of the KU-Y Youth Friendship program, Henderson said. PARTICIPANTS ARE assigned to work with maladjusted children or children who don't always adjust because they are new in the community, Tom Moore, secretary of KU-Y, said. "They can be rich and not adjusted," he said. Moore said the children are not necessarily from the lower income or poverty stricken areas. Volunteers work with the child on a one to one basis. The activities the volunteer takes the child to depend on the individual situations. There are many things to do together, Henderson said. The volunteer can take children to plays, movies, and the library. "DON'T TRY to buy the child's friendship," Henderson told a woman in an interview. Children in need of friends are located through the schools and the social welfare service. The schools provide the most referrals. Frauds Beset Foreign Students Last week K-State administrators alerted Clark Coan, dean of students and International student adviser, that a man in their area was selling tickets to a nonexistent international student dinner in Topeka. The man posed as a member of the faculty and told his prospective customers that a dinner and program were being held in Topeca for all the International students in the state. A SIMILAR SCHEME was tried last year and tickets were sold for $3.50. The exploitation of International students is not confined to the selling of tickets, however. At KU last spring a man and two women tried to persuade International students to subscribe to certain magazines. THEY WOULD MAKE the student pay in part, and told students they would send the rest of the bill later. The students received few, if any, of the magazines. The students who alerted Dean Coan to last year's team said five or six others had already paid. by such teams or individuals is to phone the International student and ask to make an appointment. If the student refuses, the individual argues and threatens. A common procedure followed "THE OFTEN FINDS out the name of the international student adviser and says he has his permission to sell," said Dean Coan. "Students are exploited commercially if not by fraudulent salesmen," said Dean Coan. "They have been made to buy expensive and unnecessary auto equipment and have been taken advantage of in rental situations." "An affectionate panorama of the American theatre's greatest moments . . . in story and song." AN AMERICAN MEDLEY Conceived by William Kuhlke and Allen Crafton SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL in Murphy Hall Nov. 11-13 8:20 p.m. Prices: 75c (student rate) and $1.50 Phone: UN 4-3982 The Classical Film Series presents Bandits Of Orgoloso (Italy-1961) A penetrating examination of the lives of Sardinian shepherds by Vittorio De Seta Admission 60¢ Wednesday----7:00 p.m. Dyche Auditorium Daily Kansan Monday, November 8, 1965 Beba... the four-poster girl, Nordic and nice, who got him into a hot-bed of danger! A Joseph E. Levine presentation in Color Coming Wed.! We Had To Bring It Back! Returned to you for a Limited 3 day engagement! Rod Steiger IS "The Pawnbroker" INSTANT MILDNESS Starts Wednesday! yours with Aristocrat, Billiard Shape, $5.95 and $6.95 No matter what you smoke you'll like Yello-Bole. The new formula, honey lining insures Instant Mildness; protects the imported briar bowl—so completely, it's guaranteed against burn out for life. Why not change your smoking habits the easy way — the Yello-Bole way. $2.50 to $6.95. Official Pipes New York World's Fair Free Booklet tells how to smoke a pipe; shows shapes, write: YELLO-BOLE PIPES, INC. N, Y, 22, N, Y., Dept. 100. By the makers of KAYWOODIE