Festival of Arts Student rate reduced In a special half-price package, KU students may purchase tickets during enrollment for the Festival of the Arts, March 19 through March 25. By filling out an optional fee card, they may order coupons entitling them to a 20-page program and reserved seats at the six Student Union Activities (SUA) performances. Coupons cost $4.50.The program and tickets, purchased individually,cost $9. NON-STUDENTS may purchase the coupon package for $6 after enrollment in the SUA office. The $4.50 student rate will be added to university fee bills. The Festival's schedule of events and individual performance costs are as follows: Sunday, March 19: Rey de la Torre, classic guitarist and Bill Evans, Jazz Trio. $1.50 Monday, March 20: Film Festival. $ .75 Tuesday, March 21: Chuck Jones cartoonist. $7.5 Wednesday, March 22: Edward Albee, author of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf" and other plays, lecturing on the present state of the arts. $1.00 Thursday, March 23: An Evening's Frost, a professional theatrical presentation of Robert Frost's poetry. $1.50 Saturday, March 25: Count Basie and Odetta. $3.00 Party, fund drive on Soph's agenda Free beer, a congress seminar and a fund drive are the latest plans on the Class of 1969's agenda. Sophomores having paid class fees will be admitted free to the Red Dog Inn, Friday, and will be entitled to free samples of the fabled "students' favorite beverage." The TGIF will be the second of the year sponsored by the sophomores. The Class of 1969 Seminar, to be February 11-12, has a twofold purpose: to inform representatives from other colleges about the congress and influence the establishment of similar forms of class government in other schools; and to encourage the support of a Vietnamese orphanage. THE REPRESENTATIVES will soon be given their most important independent duties so far. They are being urged to encourage more students to stop by the Alumni Office in Strong Hall and pay their class fees. Representatives are to contact Four skits submitted by paired Greek houses have been selected for the 1967 Rock Chalk satire-variety show March 2 through 4 in Hoch Auditorium. "Boobs in Toyland, or Just Clowning Around," will be presented by Alpha KappaLambda fraternity and Alpha Chi Omega sorority, and "The Eyes of Taxes are Upon You," will be given by Delta Chi fraternity and Alpha Phi sorority. Rock Chalk performers are chosen SIGMA PHI EPSILON fraternity and Chi Omega sorority will have a skit entitled, "Can a KU Coed Find Happiness in Wonderland?", and Beta Theta Pi fraternity and Delta Gamma sorority will present "Table Eight—Nirvana in the Wilderness." Besides the four major skits, between-act performances will be presented. "A chorus will be chosen next week," Will Price, Rock Chalk Revue producer and Wichita senior said. the sophomores in their living groups and find out who has not paid his dues. Then it will be the representative's responsibility to sell them on the importance of the congress by allowing them to buy a membership in the class of 1969. He said awards will be given to the best performer or composer in the following categories: actor, actress, choreography, script, original song, lighting, and setting. Judging will take place all three nights, Price said. "The actual purpose of the drive is not merely to beef up the treasury but to make more class-sponsored activities possible," representative Kathy Harrington, Prairie Village, said. "With an active congress and financial backing, all the proposed projects and more will become realities," she added. Each representative is being asked to induce five fee payments, making about 400 altogether, or $1,200.00. Approximately 2,500 sophomores have not paid their fees. The proposed service projects the congress hopes to finance include: the adoption of a six-year-old Vietnamese orphan, which they have already done; a statewide drive to raise $400,000 to establish an orphanage in Viet Nam; the purchase of television sets for Watkins Hospital; a campus-wide stamp campaign, the profits from which will be used to send food to needy families and orphanages overseas; and the Kansas college and university class officer's seminar. SUA dance to present jazz history A progressive history of jazz will be presented by the KU Kicks Band in a concert-dance at the Kansas Union ballroom following the KU-Oklahoma basketball game Saturday night, Jan. 7, 1967. The 17-piece band will musically trace the development of jazz featuring the style of early jazzmen to contemporary artists like Dave Brubeck and others. THE BALLROOM will be transformed into a New Orleans-style night club with candle light and checkered table cloths for the occasion. The event is sponsored by the KU-Y Special Events Committee and the SUA. WEATHER The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts partly cloudy skies tomorrow with a low tonight in the lower 20's. Precipitation probability tonight less than 10 per cent, less than 5 per cent tomorrow. Prof to go to Mexico Kenneth C. Deemer, chairman of the department of mechanics and aerospace engineering, has accepted an offer to head an organization which will create a graduate program in engineering The project is jointly sponsored by the Mexican government and the United Nations Education, Scientific, and Cultural Organization. at the National Polytechnic Institute in Mexico City. The Center for Training Graduate Engineers and Professor of Engineering, Science, and Technology at the National Polytechnic Institute will prepare graduates for full-time university teaching positions. Full-time teaching of the professions still is relatively uncommon in Latin America, which has a tradition of part-time teaching by practicing professionals. KENNETH C. DEEMER The National Polytechnic Institute, larger than any single university in the United States, is second in enrollment only to the University of Mexico. The Center will establish master's and doctor's degree programs in engineering and related technologies, including physics, chemistry, mathematics, and biochemistry, and programs of study in modern philosophies, skills, and tools of university teaching. To discuss theology Predestination will be discussed by a panel of three faculty members at 6 p.m. Sunday at The Fiery Furnace, 1116 Louisiana St. Participants in the discussion entitled, "Determinism—Academic and Non-academic," are Frances Horowitz, associate professor of psychology; David Jones, assistant professor of philosophy, and Robert Friauf, professor of physics. The panel discussion is sponsored by the KU Canterbury Association. When You're in Doubt—Try It Out, Kansan Classifieds. 10 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 4, 1967 McCoy's Semi-Annual Shoe Sale Now In Progress WOMEN'S MAINEAIRE LADY BOSTONIAN and TEMPO LOAFERS were $9 to $15 Reduced 20% and 30% RISQUE MID AND LOW HEEL DRESS & WALKING SHOES were $12 to $15 $8.90 $9.90 $10.90 DRESS FLATS & LOW HEELS were to $11 $6.90-$7.90 Most of these shoes and others are on tables. Come in and look them over. Brown, Cordo Brown, Navy Blue, Grain and Brown Grain 813 Mass.