16,000 Plus Enrollment In 1964-'65 A total of 16,578 persons were provided with regular academic classwork at the University of Kansas last year, according to the annual report of James K. Hitt, registrar and director of the office of admissions and records. The individual semesters saw 13,475 students in the fall of 1964, 12,643 in the spring of 1965, and 5,042 in the summer session. Total registration for the year was an increase of 1,137 over the previous year. STUDENTS ENROLLED at KU from every county in Kansas, from every state in the nation, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, and 86 foreign countries. One of five students attending KU in the fall of 1964 was married, according to the report, with percentages ranging from $3.2\%$ of the freshmen to $23.7\%$ of the seniors, $42.6\%$ of fifth year students, $45.4\%$ of law students, and $49.0\%$ of graduate students. The School of Pharmacy had the greatest proportion of married undergraduates, 29.6%; followed by the School of Education, 22.8%; School of Business, 20.9%; and the School of Engineering and Architecture, 17.2%. Lowest proportion, 7.7%, was in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The University awarded 2,729 degrees during the 12 months, bringing the University's total to 63,993. Lights Burn Late On Mount Oread Sleepy KU students are proving that lights in many houses and halls on campus must burn far into the night. One senior, suffering from a lack of sleep and a professor with a lulling, monosyllabic voice, wrote the words "snow-skiing" in the middle of a sentence having to do with Shakespeare. ANOTHER student, examining his notes after class, discovered that his words gradually disintegrated into unreadable chicken scratches, and finally, a wavy line. The student who topped both of these, however, was one who fell asleep during a Saturday morning class and began snoring. Lashbrook Talks On Latin Studies Prof. Austin M. Lashbrook, chairman of the department of classics and classical archaeology at KU, will give the principal address for the fall meeting of the Pennsylvania State Association of Classical Teachers Saturday at Franklin and Marshall College, Lancaster, Pa. Dr. Lashbrook's topic will be "Latin in the High School Curriculum." He also will be a panelist on the proposed five-year high school curriculum. Daily Kansan Friday, October 22, 1965 Ad Must Be Brought In With Garments NOW... EXECUTIVE SHIRT SERVICE 25c EACH GOOD FOR 7 DAYS TROUSERS, SKIRTS PLAIN SWEATERS CAREFULLY DRY CLEANED AND BEAUTIFULLY PRESSED 49C EACH Men's or Ladies' 2-Piece SUITS EACH 99c BLANKETS NO LIMIT 89c Put 'em back on the bed really clean. Returned in a plastic blanket bag. NO LIMIT ONE HOUR MARTINIZING 1407 MASSACHUSETTS (Across from Junior High School) THESE SPECIALS NOT GOOD ON SATURDAY POPULAR FILM SERIES STARRING: Laurence Harvey and Jane Fonda 35c Friday, Oct. 22 and Saturday, Oct. 23 tonight tomorrow 7:00 p.m. & 9:00 p.m. Dyche Auditorium 35c Advanced Tickets At Kansas Union Information Booth.